Skip to main content

Full text of "The story of Evangelina Cisneros (Evangelina Betancourt Cosio y Cisneros)"

See other formats



HER RESCUE 

j ['^ JF \» \^ Va* -K^ No, Kj 

Karl Decker 

INTRODUCTION BY- 



F 



CORNELL 

UNIVERSITY 

LIBRARY 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



The story of Evangelina Clsneros (Evange 
3 1924 021 171 347 



esi( 

ill 





DATE DUE 




'7tP#»lM 


fewC /-I^A^ 








tjw-igegg 














n'B 








?i£^ 


n ?nnn 


^m^ 




















i^>..:l 


"■■"•**'•**»» 


•»«-.. ,. 




. . . r^ J 


o-fifnn^ 






}§^J>» 


wWu/ 






































































CAYLOKD 






PHINTEO JNU.S.A. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



This book was digitized by Microsoft Corporation in 

cooperation with Corneii University Libraries, 2007. 

You may use and print this copy in iimited quantity 

for your personai purposes, but may not distribute or 

provide access to it (or modified or partiai versions of it) 

for revenue-generating or other commerciai purposes. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Cornell University 
Library 



The original of tlnis book is in 
tine Cornell University Library. 

There are no known copyright restrictions in 
the United States on the use of the text. 



http://www.archivi,g9/^^gjgiy:u31 924021 1 71 347 



EVANGELINA ClSNEROS 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



THE STORY OF 



gVANGELINA C^NEROS 

(EVANGELINA BETANCOURT COSIO Y CISNEROS) 
TOLD BY HERSELF 



HER RESCDE BY 

KARL DECKER 

INTRODDCTION BY 

JULIAN HAWTHORNE 



ILLUSTRATIONS BY 

FREDERIC REMINGTON 
THOMAS FLEMING 

AND OTHERS 



MDCCCXCVIII 

CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING COMPANY 

25 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



X 



copyright, 1897, by 
Continental Publishing Co. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



©aNTENTS 

PAGE 

Preface 7 

Dedication 9 

Mr. Hawthorne's Introduction 15 

Protests and Petitions 29 

Mr. Decker's Story 57 

Miss Cisneros' Story. 119 

History of Cuba 227 

Chronology 255 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



PREFACE 

IT was in response to the demand of the 
men and women of America that the 
New Tork Journal rescued Miss Cis- 
neros from the power of Spain. It was a 
national demand that this young- girl be 
saved from the infamies of Spanish prison 
life. The Journal has done its part. Miss 
Cisneros is now the ward of the American 
people. 

Although the/owrwa/has done its part, it 
does not intend to let the matter rest there. 
Miss Cisneros must be taken care of. A 
fund must be established for her support. 
The Journal believes it will meet the wishes 
of the true-hearted Americans, who demand- 
ed her release, if it affords them an oppor- 
tunity to contribute to this fund. 

It seemed best, too, that this young Cuban 
girl should not be forced to ask charity even 
of her American friends. 

It was decided, therefore, to publish this 
book — in which Miss Cisneros herself tells 
the story of her imprisonment and rescue. 
Every copy sold will be sold for the benefit 
of Miss Cisneros. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



IL,L,1!JSTRATI0NS 



PACE 

Evangelina Cisneros 4 

Murdering the Wounded 21 

Monro Castle 33 

Cuban Refui?ees 49 

Karl Decker's Portrait 63 

Decker in Havana 79 

Miss Cisneros in Cuban Dress 97 

For Cuba Libre 109 

Tobacco Plantation 127 

A Foraging Expedition 143 

A Spanish Cavalryman 161 

Spanish Infantryman 181 

Rescuer and Rescued 201 

At the Reception 219 

Spanish Levies 233 

An Insurgent Battery 245 

Map of Cuba 259 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



JULIAN HAWTHORNE'S 
INTRODUCTION 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



INTRODUCTION 




JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 



OTHING in modern his- 
tory can be exactly com- 
pared with this story ; 
and few things in orthodox 
fiction either — if Realism be 
orthodox. Mr. Anthony 
Hope might have imagined 
it ; and possibly he is regret- 
ting that he did not. We are 
indeed accustomed to finding 
truth stranger than fiction; 
but it is a new sensation to find it also more 
romantic — more in the fashion of the Ara- 
bian Nights and the Gothic fairy-tales of 
Mediaeval ages. The New Journalism has 
achieved many wonders; but nothing so 
wonderful as when its best representative, 
the New York Journal, conceived the idea 
of freeing an imprisoned maiden from a 
cruel tyrant, and carried the conception into 
successful realization through the agency 
of Mr. Karl Decker. No adventure of 
modem times has so appealed to the imag- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l8 INTRODUCTION. 

ination of the world ; had the knight of La 
Mancha not been a Spaniard, and had the 
achievement been less splendidly practical,' 
we might call it Quixotic. Possibly even 
the Spaniards themselves, when they have 
begun to forget that the Pearl of the Antil- 
les ever belonged to them, and when they 
remember their own romantic and heroic 
exploits in the days of the Cid, may bring 
themselves to admit that the story of Karl 
Decker and Evangelina Cisneros can fitly 
take its place beside the most brilliant 
and moving of their ancient chronicles of 
daring. 

With the telling of the story the present 
writer, of course, has nothing to do; it is 
told by the protagonists as only they could 
do it. But I may be permitted to observe 
that in its setting and background, in its 
dramatis fersonce, in its dash, intrigue, and 
cumulative interest, it is almost ideally per- 
fect. The desirable component elements 
are all present. A tropic island, em- 
bosomed in azure seas off the coast of the 
Spanish Main ; a cruel war, waged by the 
minions of despotism against the spirit of 
patriotism and liberty; a beautiful maiden, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



JUUAN HAWTHORNE. 1 9 

risking all for her country, captured, in- 
sulted, persecuted, and cast into a loath- 
some dungeon. None could be more inno- 
cent, constant and adorable than she ; none 
more wicked, detestable and craven than 
her enemies. All is right and lovable on 
the one side, all ugly and hateful on the 
other. As in the old Romances, there is no 
uncertainty as to which way our sympathies 
should turn. The opposition is as clean and 
clear as between black and white. Such 
was the preliminary situation as \h& Journal 
found it. 

There is nothing precipitate about the 
newspaper's action. We may liken it to 
that of some puissant prince of fairy legend, 
despatching a courteous but cogent message 
to the Ogre, calling his attention to the 
wrong done his captive, and demanding 
justice in her behalf. This message, though 
weighted with the names of the womanhood 
of America and England, and with those 
of many famous personages of the other 
sex, produced no noticeable effect upon the 
Ogre . He had made up his mind to torture 
and devour his victim in the wicked old 
ogreish way, and was not to be diverted 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



ao INTRODtrCTION. 

from his purpose by any considerations of 
civilized humanity. 

At this point the realistic novelist would 
end his narrative, fearing he had already 
ventured too far. One must stick to proba- 
bilities ; Congress sets the example of limit- 
ing its activities to diplomatic pour-parlers; 
and no one with any regard for the modesty 
of nature would dream of going any further. 
But fortunately for Evangelina Cisneros, 
the proprietors of the Journal would rather 
make a good thing real than debate whether 
or not so good a thing as Evangelina's 
rescue would be a probable incident. 

The Journal, indeed, made but sparing 
allusions to the failure of its first effort ; and 
hasty judges may have inferred that it had 
given up the enterprise. Yet, when one 
thought of it, there was something ominous 
in its very silence. It was a pregnant 
silence; it meant business; and — as the 
world now knows — the most surprising 
business that ever any newspaper was con- 
cerned in. 

I was not in the least on the inside in this 
affair; I surmise very few persons were. 
But during the silence in question a young 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 23 

gentleman named Karl Decker received cer- 
tain instructions, acted upon them with 
alacrity, and had transported himself to 
Havana before any of us had the ghost of a 
suspicion that anything was in the wind. 

What he did there and how he did it, you 
will know when you have read this book. 
It was my fortune to be among the first to 
greet him on his return ; and I had not long 
had my eyes on him, and listened to his 
quiet, low-voiced talk, before I understood 
that he was just the man to have rescued 
Evangelina Cisneros. You might pass him 
in the street without noticing that he was 
anything more than tall and good-looking; 
but a man must be a great deal besides that 
before he can perform such a feat as that 
which stands to Karl Decker's credit. He 
must be a man from every point of view. 

He is, in fact, a young American of the 
best and oldest strain, with the Constitution 
in his backbone and the Declaration of In- 
dependence in his eyes. In spite of his 
quietness and modesty, his face shows bold- 
ness to the verge of rashness, and perhaps a 
little beyond that verge, upon occasion ; but 
tempered with an abiding sense of humor 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



24 INTRODUCTION. 

and sterling common-sense and sanity. 
Beyond his frank and simple bearing was 
conveyed the impression that here was one 
who could keep his own counsel: could 
hide a purpose in the depths of his soul, as 
a torpedo is hidden in the sea, and explode 
it at the proper moment in the vitals of his 
adversary. He had imagination to con- 
ceive, ingenuity to plan, coolness and reso- 
lution to carry out, and then — best of all — 
that wonderful power of belief in the possi- 
bility of the impossible which is the final 
cause of most of the memorable exploits of 
men. Of course he had the courage to risk 
his life — many men have that: but to risk 
it in such a long-drawn, hopeless way ! We 
have to go back to Gushing, Paul Jones and 
Nelson to find any parallel to that. To 
show how much better truth is than fiction 
— even romantic fiction — we must bear in 
mind that the romantic novelist would in 
all probability have made the rescue suc- 
cessful at the first attempt, and thereby have 
lost the finest touch of the whole transac- 
tion. After a long and anxious period of 
preparation, we have the man keyed up to 
concert-pitch, tense and concentrated, his 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 25 

soul forcing his body up to the supreme test 
and moment — and then somebody stirs 
down in the prison room, and the affair 
must be postponed. Four-and-twenty hours 
must drag by before the adventure can be 
resumed. During those interminable hours 
he must reflect that very likely the half- 
sawn bar has been noticed, and that when 
he gets back to his place on the roof he will 
find, not Evangelina, but the muzzles of 
half-a-dozen Spanish rifles peeping through 
the window. With that anticipation in his 
mind, in the radiant tropic moonlight, he 
must cross that awful little ladder again and 
make his way to the jaws of death. How 
can he do it? Does he himself know? He 
knows that he did do it ; and probably he 
did it without the faintest idea of not doing 
it. It was just a newspaper assignment, 
that's all, which he had accepted, and 
which, as a matter of course, he would ful- 
fil — or die! It might be more reasonable to 
put it the other way about : he would die — 
or fulfil it. Well, the miracle takes place; 
the Ogre is defrauded ; the maiden is re- 
scued; we hear the cab rattling over the 
pavements in the night — silence : she and 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



26 INTRODUCTION. 

the hero have vanished into the unknown, 
and all is well. Another newspaper reporter 
has done his duty, and the managing editor 
permits himself a smile of satisfaction. 

I must admit that one anxiety haunted 
me from the first : I was afraid that Evan- 
gelina would turn out to be less beautiful 
than had been alleged. In newspaperdora 
all women are presumed to be beautiful un- 
til they have been proved ugly; and it 
seemed to me that precisely because the 
ideal had been realized in all other respects 
there would be a break at this point, and 
that our heroine would outwardly at least 
fail to come up to the fairy-tale standard. 
Such was my lack of faith ; and I did not 
deserve, therefore, to be so delightfully dis- 
appointed. No fairy princess could be 
more lovely than this fairy-like little Cuban 
maiden ; her features have the delicate re- 
finement only given by race ; her eyes are 
liquid darkness, her smile flashes like light, 
expressions vibrate over her vivid face like 
the play of colors on the humming-bird ; 
her movements are all grace and charm. 
She is a heroine worth daring an army of 
Ogre? for, even for her own sake. But the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



JULIAN HAWTHORNE. ^^ 

act which freed her has a significance far 
beyond its personal relation to Evangelina. 
Perhaps I need not dwell upon this aspect 
of the case. It is obvious enough. An 
American newspaper has shown America 
what she ought to do. Evangelina is not 
the only Cuban woman whom Weyler, with 
the connivance of the Spanish Government, 
has outraged. On the contrary, she is the 
representative of them all. This whole 
nation has risen to welcome her from her 
captivity, and to honor her rescuer. We 
pronounce the deed good and righteous 
and well done. We feel that there are 
higher and worthier warrants for action 
than the stipulations of international law. 
We owe all that we are to liberty ; and from 
those to whom much is given much shall 
be required. If we do not love liberty for 
others as well as for ourselves, we are not 
deserving of it. In the person of Evan- 
gelina Cisneros, Cuba appeals to us. With 
what grace can we receive the one and repel 
the other? 



'^~f^^o,^v-yvhuj-i 



A<h)'T«-f_ 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



PROTESTS 

AND 

PETITIONS 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



THE WOMEN OF AMERICA 




MRS. DAVIS. 



HE events that culminated 
in the rescue of Evangelina 
Cosio y Cisneros go to 
make up a story little less 
than wonderful. 

Atrocities in Cuba had 
come to be the most com- 
monplace of news. Every 
mail from the island 
brought tidings of mur- 
ders, burnings and other outrages. Even when 
the victims were women, so accustomed had 
the world grown to such tales of horror, that 
little comment was occasioned. At intervals 
for a period of over a year through the Cuban 
news ran the story of one Cuban girl, who 
for alleged complicity in an uprising in the 
Isle of Pines had been cast into the foul 
prison for abandoned women in Havana. 

She was only eighteen years old, cultured, 
talented and beautiful, and the thing that 
made her case stand out among so many 
wrongs was that she was being persecuted, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



32 THE WOMEN 

not for any part slie had taken in rebellion 
against Spain, but for resisting the insulting 
advances of a savage in Spanish uniform 
whose brutality had brought him well earned 
disgrace. 

The New York Journal of August 17th, 
1897, contained this message from a staff cor- 
respondent in Cuba : 

" Havana, August 1 6th.— The trial of 
Evangelina Cosio y Cisneros for rebellion is 
concluded, but the court-marshal's verdict is 
withheld in accordance with the usual cus- 
tom until it is approved by the Captain-Gen- 
eral. The Fiscal at the opening of the trial 
demanded that she be sentenced to twenty 
years' imprisonment in an African penal set- 
tlement. The withholding of the verdict is 
almost certain evidence of her conviction. 
Even the Spaniards in civil life here are hor- 
ror-stricken at the idea of a young girl being 
condemned to the awful prison. There is 
very little chance of her escape from this fate. 
Public opinion has not the slightest weight 
with the military court that tried her. " 

This was followed by a statement of the 
girl's case and a short account of her life. 
Her relationship with the gentlest families in 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



OP AMERICA. 



35 




Cuba was explained, and some idea was given 
of what the fate, to which she was in all prob- 
ability doomed, meant to a pure young girl 
who had been all her life 
tenderly guarded and cared 
for. Two of the girl's prison 
companions, Senora A g r a - 
m o n t e De Sanchez and 
Senorita Maria Aguilar, told 
of her life in that hideous 
prison in Havana. These 
two ladies were political 
prisoners like Miss Cisneros. 
Mrs. Sanchez is seventy-two 
years old, but was locked up among the out- 
casts of Havana because her five sons occu- 
. pied distinguished posts in the Cuban Army. 

Miss Aguilar's offense was that her brothers 
were fighting Spain. 

"When we were first put into Recojidas," 
said the old lady, ' ' we saw this young girl 
among the awful women for whom the prison 
was originally intended. We called her to 
us, and learned from her own lips who she 
was. Evangelina was even then in the last 
stages of despair. She did not know why 
she was thrown into such a foul place, she, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



36 THE WOMEN 

who has been accustomed to civilization's 
gentlest and most refined ways. Even the 
food given her was unfit to eat. We saw she 
was a girl of intelligence and refinement, 
but with absolutely no experience — child that 
she was — and we sought to cheer and com- 
fort her. We told her to stay by us when- 
ever it was possible, and never to remain 
more than she had to among the other 
prisoners — women of the lowest charac- 
ter." 

Miss Aguilar said Miss Cisneros still bore 
the marks on her wrists made by the hand- 
cuffs with which she had been manacled in the 
Isle of Pines. 

Both of these ladies were horrified at the 
idea of a poor young girl's being sent to 
Africa, where she would be at the absolute 
mercy of Spain's worst criminals. 

This presentation of the case of the hap- 
less Cuban maiden awoke an immediate re- 
sponse. The women of America interested 
themselves at once, and through the Journal, 
put forth every effort to procure clemency 
for her. Almost the first of the noble women 
who came to her aid was Mrs. Jefferson 
Davis, the widow of the President of the 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



OP AMERICA. 



37 



Confederate States. The foumal cabled her 
appeal to Madrid. It was as follows : 

"To Her Majesty Maria CrisHna, 
Queen Regent of Spain : 
'■'■Dear Madam : In common with 
many of my country women I have 
been ■much moved by 
the accounts of the 
arrest and trial of 
Senorita Evange- 
lina Cisneros. Of 
course, at this great 
distance, I am ig- 
norant of the full 
■partiailars of her 
case. But I do know 
she is young, defense- 
less and in sore 
straits. Ho'wever, 
all the world is familiar ■with the shin- 
ing deeds of the first lady of Spain, 
who has so splendidly illustrated the 
virtues which exalt a wife andfnolh r, 
a'ndwho has added to these the wis- 
dom of a statesman and the patience 
and fortitude of a saint. 




QUEEN REGENT Or SPAIX. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



38 THE WOMEN 

"To you I appeal to extend your 
powerful protection over this foor cap- 
tive girl — a child almost in years — 
to save her from a fate worse than 
death. I am sure yout kind heart 
does not prompt you to vengeance, 
even though the provocation may have 
been great. I entreat you to give her 
to the women of America, to live 
among us in peace. 

* ' We will become sureties that her 
life in future will be one long thank 
ojfering for your clemency. 

"Do not, dear Madam, refuse this 
boon to us and we will always pray 
for the prosperity of the young King, 
your son, and for that of his wise 
and self-abnegating mother. 

'■'■Your admiring and respecting 
petitioner, 

Varina Jefferson Davis, 
August i8th, i8gy. 

The same night that this was cabled Mrs. 
Julia Ward Howe, the author of the " Battle 
Hymn of the Republic," gave to the fournal 
an appeal to His Holiness Pope Leo XHI., 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF AMERICA. 



39 



whicli the Journal immediately cabled to 
Rome: 

To His Holiness, Pope Leo XIII. 

Most Holy Father: To you, as the 
head of Catholic Christendom, we 
appeal for aid in behalf of Evan- 
gelina Cosio y Cisneros, a young 
lady of Cuba, one of whose near rela- 
tives is concerned in the present ivar, 
in which she herself has taken no 
■part. She has been 
arrested, tried by court 
martial, and is in danger 
of suffering a sentence 
more cruel than death — 
that of twenty years of 
exile and imprisonment 
in the Spanish penal col- 
ony of Ceuta, in Africa, 
where no woman has ever 
before been sent, and where, besides en- 
during every hardship and indignity, 
she would have for her companions 
the lowest criminals and outcasts. 

We implore you, Holy Father, to 
emulate the action of that Providence 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



40 THE WOMEN 

which interests itself in the fall of a 
sparrow. A single word from you 
will surely induce the Spanish Gov- 
eminent to abstain from this act of 
military vengeance, which would 
greatly discredit it in the eyes of the 
civilized world. 

We devoutly hope that your wisdom 
will see fit to utter this word, and to 
make not us alone, but all humanity, 
your debtors. 

fULIA WARD HOWE. 

Mrs. Howe also addressed a call to all 
good men and true women of America, ask- 
ing them to make this girl's cause their own. 
This the Journal published with Mrs. Davis' 
petition to the Queen and the appeal to His 
Holiness. 

TO ALL GOOD MEN AND TRUE 

WOMEN: 

The deplorable events of the Cuban 
war seems to have reached their climax 
in the arrest and probably condemna- 
tion oj one innocent young girl, 
Evangelina Cisneros, the niece of a 
prominent conspirator, but guiltless 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF AMERICA. 41 

herself of any act of rebellion against 
the Government of Spain. She has 
already suffered a degrading and 
undeserved imprisonment^ and is 
now threatened with a sentence 
which would condemn her to wear 
out her young life in a penal colony 
whose discipline is administered with 
all the cruelty of which the Spanish 
war has shown itself capable. 

How can we think of this pure 
flower of maidenhood condemned to 
live with felons and outcasts, with- 
out succor, without protection, to 
labor under a torrid sky, suffering 
privation, indignity and torment 
worse than death ? Public opinion, 
it is said, cannot avail against this 
act of military vengeance — vengeance 
to be wreaked upon an innocent vic- 
tim. To what and to whom, then, 
shall we appeal? To the sense of 
justice of the civilized world; to all 
good men and true women; to every 
parent to whom a child's honor is 
dear; to every brother who would 
defend a sister fro?n outrage. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



42 THE WOMEN 

Let the protest ring throughout 
Christendom, and if this poor girl 
■must meet this dreadful doom, let 
her know that the world'' s respect for 
the Spanish civilization will die be- 
fore she does. 

JULIA WARD HOWE. 

These ladies felt the most intense interest 
in the persecuted girl. 

" Anything I can do," said Mrs. Davis, " I 
will willingly do to aid that unfortunate 
child, I am a mother, and my heart goes 
out to her." 

The example of these two noble women 
fired the womanhood of America. The 
Woman's National Cuban League issued an 
appeal that was soon followed by many 
others. 

At this time the Journal's only part had 
been to present the case of the unfortunate 
girl to the American public and to transmit 
to Spain the appeals of American ladies who 
had interested themselves in her behalf, but 
even this work of mercy roused the resent- 
ment of Captain General Weyler, Because 
of what the Journal had done he caused 
to be expelled from Cuba Mr. George 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



QP AMERICA. 



43 




MRS. LOGAN. 



Eugene Bryson, the JoumaVs correspondent, 

who gave to the world the 

story of the secret trial of 

the young girl. The expul- 
sion of its correspondent did 

not by any means interrupt 

the efEorts of the Journal. 

The same day it received 

the news of Bryson's ban- 
ishment it was able to 

transmit this eloquent plea 

from Mrs. John A. Logan to the Queen 

Regent : 

Washington, Aug. 20, 1897. 
Her Majesty Maria Cristina, 
Queen Regent of Spain. 
In the name of Christianity I beg that 
you cause Evangelina Cosio Cisneros to 
be returned to her home and friends. Her 
innocence, the irregularity of her trial, 
the severity of her sentence of exile and 
imprisonment in the Spanish penal colony 
of Ceuta, in Africa, amid revolting and 
unhallowed surroundings, must appeal to 
your mother's heart. Her case has no 
parallel in modem times, and can only be 
compared to the atrocities inflicted upon 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



44 THE WQMEN 

the Christians by order of Nero, whose 
butchery of the innocents is even to this 
day considered the most fiendish the world 
ever saw; the thought of them must be 
sickening to your gentle soul. 

No ofience committed by all the relatives 
of this young woman , still in her teens, 
can form any excuse for such brutal ven- 
geance upon her. As I recall you, sur- 
rounded by your children, including the 
young Sovereign of Spain, with your 
sweet face uplifted in prayer in your 
church in Madrid, Easter-time, i8g6, I 
cannot imagine so much cruelty in your 
heart as would be required to confirm such 
a sentence as that meted out to innocence 
like that of Senorita Evangelina Cis?ieros. 
On the contrary, I should expect you to 
find it hard to cause a just sentence to be 
carried out against a hardened criminal. 
So much tenderness and religious fervor 
beamed from your countenance that I shall 
expect to hear that you have listened to the 
prayers sent up in her behalf, and that 
you have ordered her release, and that 
right speedily, thereby adding another to 
your many beneficent and just acts. Your 
very name is synonymous with Christian- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF AMERICA. 45 

tiy. You have in your keeping the ruler 
of a nation, who will doubtless be guided 
by you for good or ill to his subjects. 
Your influence will unquestionably be 
such that they will rise up en masse and 
call you blessed. Such is the wish of 
the women of America, who would that 
peace might reign everywhere. 
For God and humanity. 
Yours respectfully, 

MRS. fOHN A. LOGAN. 

The religious sisterhoods now became in- 
terested and the Sister Superior of the Sisters 
of Notre Dame and the Superior of the 
Order of the Visitation telegraphed ^ht. Jour- 
nal, asking that their names be included in 
the petition to the Queen Regent. 

Accordingly a petition was draughted to 
bear the signatures of all the American wo- 
men who wished to be represented in the 
plea for mercy. 

The names of the highest women in the 
land were attached to this document. 

Mrs. Julia Dent Grant, the widow of the 
great general, was glad to sign her name. 

Mrs. McKinley, the mother of the Presi- 
dent, in affixing her signature, said: 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



46 



THE WOMEN 



"I am in profound sympathy ■witli the^ 
movement of the American women to secure 
the release of Miss Cisneros, and hope and 
pray it will be successful. It is an outrage 
to send a woman to that awful place simply' 





fe^ 



Sfer Majesty 



^nxbe nama of civilisation ■■• 
anal humans^, we^'^SiS' nodftrsi^ned--* 
American cra3Qns , &,sH ^owr hSaie^. 
%• eAcud ^oar r«yal prst'ctionto Evan- 
jelina. Cotsis Cisneros , nsw lym^ in 
|>ris°n in Havana and threefbened with 
a, setAence, of twenty y^ai'J imprison* 
menfc. ■•■■••/■ ■• 

We ast y°u to szt this inavcant yjua^ 
^trl "free axul send lier "fcp live amon^ 
the wstneit cf ink United Stat«9... 




THE PETITION. 



because she is a woman true to her country, 
and it is doubly outrageous to exile her 
without something like a fair trial. 

"The women of America can accomplish 
a great deal sometimes, and I can assure 
them they have my hearty endorsement and 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OP AMERICA. 47 

prayers for success. I hope the Queen Re- 
gent will listen to the voices of the Amer- 
ican women and her own conscience, and set 
the Cuban child free." 

The daughter of another President, Mrs. 
Letitia Tyler Semple, the wife of Secretary 
of State Sherman, Mrs. William C. Whitney, 
Mrs. John G. Carlisle, Mrs. Calvin S. Brice, 
Mrs. Mark Hanna, Mrs. Francis Hodgson 
Burnett and a hundred others bearing fa- 
mous names, were among the early signers 
to the petition, which, before the list was 
closed, contained the signatures of twenty 
thousand American women. 

For a time it seemed as if these tireless ef- 
forts might result successfully. 

On August 27, 1897, came the reply from 
Rome that the Pope had granted what had 
been asked of him. The message was as 
follows : 

ROME, Aug. 24,1897.— The Pope, in- 
fluenced by the petition cabled by the Jour- 
nal for Julia Ward Howe and its thou- 
sands of signers, will recommend to Her 
Majesty Maria Cristina, the Queen- 
Regent of Spain, that special clemency be 
exercised toward Senorita Evangelina 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



48 



THE WOMEN 



Costo Cisneros, the young Cuban girl 
now in prison at Havana. 

His Holiness has taken a very deep in- 
terest in the fate of the fair young Cuban 
girl, and the Vatican will lose no time 
in making a papal recommendation of 
mercy to the Queen Regent of Spain. 

This was to-day stated to the Journal 
correspondent in the Vatican by Cardi- 
nal Rampolla, Papal 
Secretary of State. Cardi- 
nal Rampolla said: 

"His Holiness , 
while disapproving of 
the Cuban insurrection, 
has never failed to counsel 
prudence and magnanim- 
ity by the Spanish Gov- 
ernment toward its sub- 

POPE LEO XIII. jg^i^ {^ fl^g i^i^j^^ 

"His Holiness will," cotitinued Car- 
dinal Rampolla, " make a speedy recom- 
mendation of mercy to Her Majesty the 
Queen Regent, in behalf of Senorita 
Evangelina Cisneros." 




Mr. Hannis Taylor, the American Min- 
ister at Madrid, unofficially took great inter- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



OF AMERICA. SI 

est in the case and himself presented the 
appeals of Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Grant and the 
rest to the Queen Regent. 

Meanwhile all America had become 
aroused. From every point in the Union 
came messages to the Journal expressing 
sympathy with the movement for the Cuban 
girl's deliverance and offers of assistance. 

Then Captain General Weyler was heard 
from. Incensed by the movement in the girl's 
behalf, he cabled a brutal message defaming 
her and denying her right to sympathy. He 
even denied the facts of her trial and claimed 
that no demand had been made for a twenty 
years' sentence in her case. The Journal's 
Cuban correspondent promptly gave the lie 
to this statement. 

He cabled : 

"The papers in Miss Cisneros's case are in 
the Judge-Advocate's hands, accompanied by 
the Fiscal's claim of a twenty years' sentence 
in Ceuta. If the Judge approves the Fiscal's 
demand Weyler will surely indorse the sen- 
tence. That event could only be closed at 
Madrid upon the prisoner's appeal to the 
supreme tribuneat of war or marine. 

"That tribunal confirming the decision, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



52 THE WOMEN 

the Queen Regent's pardon alone can save 
the prisoner. 

" I interviewed both the Fiscal and Judge- 
Advocate before leaving Havana. The Fis- 
cal acknowledged that he had demanded a 
twenty years' sentence, and confirmed the 
Journal's statement. The case has already 
passed his jurisdiction to the Judge-Advo- 
cate's office." 

The cause of the tremendous efforts against 
the girl was that her acquittal would mean the 
conviction of Col. Jose Berriz, nephew of the 
then Prime Minister of Spain and a favorite 
adjutant of Weyler. He had the girl charged, 
persecuted her with his evil attentions, when 
her father was a prisoner in his custody as 
Governor of the Isle of Pines. He had sought 
to force her to submit to him by making her 
father's liberty contingent on her compliance, 
and on one occasion had broken into her room 
at midnight to compel her to accede to his 
wishes, and thereby got himself well beaten 
by the prisoners who saved her from him. 
Even the ethics of the Spanish army could 
not ignore such brutality on the part of an 
officer. To save Berriz from disgrace all the 
machinery of the Spanish Government in 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF AMERICA. 53 

Cuba was put in operation to destroy the 
name and ruin the life of an innocent Cuban 
girl. 

Depuy De Lome, the Spanish Minister at 
Washington, willingly aided Weyler in his 
unhallowed purpose. Going far beyond his 
functions as a diplomatic representative, he 
addressed letters and sent his agent to Mrs. 
Davis, Mrs. Sherman and others of the 
prominent women who signed the petitions 
to the Queen Regent, repeating to them the 
outrageous statement of Weyler, and adding 
to the falsehoods of the Captain-General's 
communications. As an answer to these the 
Journal produced witnesses who were present 
during the occurrences which preceded Miss 
Cisneros's arrest and brought to these ladies 
Cuban women of the highest position to tes- 
tify to the girl's character and qualities. 

De Lome's endeavors did not alienate one 
of Evangelina's friends. On the contrary it 
strengthened them in their purpose to aid the 
poor girl. 

Meanwhile the agitation had attracted the 
attention of England. Mrs. Ormiston Chant, 
the great English temperance advocate, took 
up the work there, and soon petitions went 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



54 THE WOMEN 

from London with the signatures of the oifi- 
cers of organizations representing two hun- 
dred thousand women, among whom were all 
those most prominently identified with re- 
form and temperance work in Great Britain. 

The petitions of the women and the inter- 
cession of the Pope had its effect at Madrid. 
The Queen Regent, through the Duke of 
Tetuan, sent a request to Weyler to remove 
the girl from her awful surroundings and 
place her under the control of one of the 
religious sisterhoods in Havana and to ex- 
pedite her trial and grant her what clemency 
he could. 

That was all the Journal had been working 
for. It thought then its effort had been ac- 
complished, but it was mistaken. The de- 
fense of Berriz weighed more with Weyler 
than did the request of his Queen. Instead 
of sending the girl to a convent he kept her 
in the prison for abandoned women and made 
her confinement more rigorous by placing 
her incommunicado. 

Word reached America that the Spaniards 
were endeavoring to get testimony on which 
to convict her by bribing other Isle of Pines 
prisoners with the promise of liberty. There 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF AMERICA. 



55 



was no hope for Evangelina Cisneros through 
the ordinary channels. 

Then it was that the Journal felt justified 
in determining on her release by other 
means, so it sent Karl Decker to Cuba to set 
her free, and how nobly he acquitted him- 
self of his difBcult and dangerous assign- 
ment the whole world knows. 




Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



KARL DECKER'S 
STORY or THE RESCUE 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



CHAPTER I. 

WHAT HAD TO BE DONE. 

HE forcible liberation of 
Miss Cisneros was not 
conceived in a moment 
nor its execution decided 
upon without long and se- 
rious deliberation. This 
final plan was not taken 
up, until all others had 
failed. For months the 
Journal had worked un- 
ceasingly to secure the 
liberty of this unfortunate girl. 

The hatred of Weyler and his determina- 
tion to cause Evangelina Cisneros to sufiEer 
fully for all the humiliation she had brought 
upon Berriz, through her successful effort 
to defend herself against his brutal attempt 
upon her honor, made hopeless any attempt 
to secure her liberation through ordinary 
means. The Queen Regent interested her- 
self in the case to the extent of writing to 
Weyler to use clemency toward the girl, but 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



6o 



HER RESCUE 



his reply was such as to cause the Queen to 
discontinue her attempt in the girl's behalf. 
He claimed that at the trial, which was 
rapidly approaching, he 
would clearly show that 
Evangelina had been guilty 
of conspiracy against Col- 
onel Berriz, having for pur- 
pose the capture of that 
officer and the liberation of 
all the prisoners on the Isle 
of Pines. 

During the latter part of 
(i August and the early part 
of September Weyler freed 
nearly fifty of the prisoners 
who had been held captive 
for fifteen months in Cabanas. Many of 
these creatures, given their freedom at this 
time, were set free with the deliberate under- 
standing that they were to perjure them- 
selves at the trial of Miss Cisneros and assist 
the Government in finding good ground for 
the conviction already decided upon. 

This was the situation that was develop- 
ing when it was decided by the Journal to 
send a special commissioner to Havana to 




GENERAL WEYLER. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 6l 

free Miss Cisneros by forcible means. That 
Weyler would insist upon sentencing the 
girl to Ceuta (the African penal colony 
of Spain), was known, and that he was power- 
ful enough to succeed was certain. The 
vital question was one of time, as it was 
necessary to have me reach Havana and 
finish my work before the final action of the 
Spanish courts. 

CHAPTER II. 

I REACH HER PRISON. 

One morning late in August I was or- 
dered to drop my work at the Journal's 
Washington Bureau and come on to New 
York at once. That evening I reported for 
duty to the managing editor of the Journal 
in the home office. 

The managing editor promptly announced 
that tla.e Journal was preparing to under- 
take, single-handed, what the allied inter- 
ests of humanity in Europe and America 
seemed hopeless of accomplishing — the re- 
lease of Evangelina Cisneros from a Cuban 
prison. For weeks the Journal had been 
fighting for her liberty with all the weapons 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



62 HKR R&SCT7S 

at the command of a modern newspaper. 
The entire country had been aroused. The 
women of every State in the Union had 
aligned themselves with the Journal in its 
effort to secure the release of Miss Cisneros, 
and the Pope himself had personally inter- 
ceded with the Queen Regent of Spain. 
These efforts had iDeen of no avail. 

"We have promised the women of this 
country and England that this girl shall be 
freed by the Journal's efforts," said the 
managing editor, summing up the situation. 
"So far we have been unsuccessful. We 
must now resort to other means. ' ' Turning 
to me, he said: "I want you to go to 
Havana, get this girl out of the Recojidas 
and send her to the United States." 

It was not a matter to ponder over. I 
was fairly familiar with the city of Havana 
and the obstacles in the way, and I replied : 

"If you will give me my own time to 
work in, and leave me absolutely unham- 
pered until I succeed, I will bring Miss Cis- 
neros back with me. ' ' 

"You shall be entirely free to use your 
own discretion as to time and method. 
And, furthermore, I can assure you of Mr, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




KARL DECKER. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 6$ 

Hearst's ample appreciation of your efforts 
if you succeed." 

Four days later I landed in Havana. I 
was fairly familiar with the city, having 
stopped there twice on former occasions, 
once while engaged in the attempt to join 
the insurgent forces for ihQ Journal, and, 
later, while making my way back to the 
United States, after having spent three 
months with Gomez and the other leaders 
of Las Villas. 

The day I arrived I went to the Recojidas 
and saw Miss Cisneros. 

I found her far more beautiful even than 
«ihe had been pictured ; a cultured, refined, 
young woman, whose thorough qualities 
were demonstrated fully in the evidence. 
She had not been tainted or contaminated 
in any fashion by her loathsome imprison- 
ment. 

I talked with her for over an hour, by the 
aid of a Spanish-speaking American who ac- 
companied me and acted as interpreter. 

We sat in the gloomy, half -lighted, Sala 
de Justicia, the target of a hundred eyes, 
directed from behind the barred grating 
which confined the prisoner to the patio of 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



66 HER RESCUE 

the jail. Under these adverse circtim- 
stances, however, she was as much the high- 
bred lady as when I saw her — many days 
after — surrounded by hundreds of dress- 
coated admirers at Delmonico's. 

The Recojidas itself is past description. 
No pen could describe the hideous squalor, 
the fearful odors or the querulous cries 
which came from the lean, half-clad or 
wholly naked children wailing in the patio. 

A stagnant gutter in the middle of the patio 
held a festering mass of filth, steaming un- 
der the hot, white, glare of an August sun, 
and accounted in some slight degree for the 
horrible death-rate of the place. About the 
walls of the inner court lounged and 
squatted half a hundred black wretches, 
their torn and tattered dresses draped about 
them seemingly with no intention of con- 
cealing their scarred bodies. Many of these 
blacks were murderesses, convicted of the 
most villainous crimes, and from time to 
time revolts occurred in which they tore 
and wounded each other in animal-like 
fashion. 

Among these wretches Evangelina Cis- 
neros had lived for more than a year. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARI, DECKER, 



67 



CHAPTER III. 

LAYING PLANS TOR THE RESCUE. 

I SAW Evangelina but once again before 
I met her on the azotea of the Recojidas, 
more than a month later. 

On the Friday after I arrived in Havana 
she was placed incommunicado, and it be- 
came possible to communicate with her only- 
after many weeks of constant endeavor. 

My first ef- 
forts after 
reaching Hav- 
ana were direct- 
ed toward secur- 
ing the assist- 
ance of men I 
might depend 
upon to aid me 
in a most dan- 
gerous under- 
taking. Every- 
thing depended 
upon finding 
the right men, 
and in this I was most fortunate. I needed 
men who spoke Spanish as a native tongue 
and were familiar with Havana. 




RECOJIDAS PRISON. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



68 HER RESCtJE 

During the time I was maturing my plot 
to rescue Evangelina I was known to the 
people of Havana as the Cuban correspond- 
ent of the Journal. I lodged, ate and drank 
at the "Inglaterra Hotel," which lies right 
in the heart of Havana, the central point of 
the city, the only place where its arteries 
open out into ventricles. My office was in 
the Casa Nueva, the finest and most 
modern building in Havana, in which is 
located the American consulate. My nights 
were spent with hordes of friends under the 
portal of the Tacon, where at little marble- 
topped tables, looking through cathedral- 
like arches into the pure, moon-queened 
vault of heaven, we drank our cognac y 
aqua de selz and talked with the longing 
love of homesick Americans of the better 
places in the States. No one suspected my 
mission save the men selected to help me 
and who I never saw except in the early 
morning hours, in the little half -furnished 
room I had rented in the lower part of 
Havana, as a rendezvous where we might 
foregather out of sight of the spies and de- 
tectives, who devoted so much of their time 
to me. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARI, DECKKR. 69 

From the 28tli of August, when I reached 
Cuba, until the middle of September we 
worked unceasingly, without making any 
progress. Then developments blossomed 
into being with promising rapidity. Plans 
were formed and rejected when found im- 
practicable, and finally, as the sum of all our 
trials, we secured a knowledge of the situa- 
tion that made our final efforts successful. 

CHAPTER IV. 
No. I O'Farrill Street. 

The Casa de Recojidas is located in the 
lowest quarter of Havana, and is surrounded 
by a huddle of squalid huts, occupied by 
negroes and Chinamen, and reeking to 
heaven by day and night. A single alley, 
perhaps twenty feet in length, zigzags 
around two sides of the building, opening 
off in front of the main entrance. 

Compostela street runs along the rear of 
the building north and south, and from this 
leads off westwardly Sigua street, by which 
dignified name is known the alley running 
along the south side of Recojidas. Turning 
at right angles to the north, the alley tipsily 
forgets its name and loses record on the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



10 



HER RESCTJE 



map of Havana. At the north end of the 
building, and just in front of the big door of 
the prison, the filthy- 
lane right angles again, 
becomes O'Farrill 
street, and strikes 
straight forward, as 
though anxious to leave 
the jail as soon as possi- 
ble. It ends at Egido 
street, opposite the 
Havana arsenal. 

This was the scene of 
our operations. There 
are single rows of 
houses in the alley fac- 
ing the side and front 
of the jail, and a double 
row on both sides of 
O'Farrill street. 

A dozen times in 
half as many hours I 
passed through this 
crooked alley trying to 
find the solution of a 
problem that would not be solved. Reco- 
jidas was apparently inaccessible ; its huge 




IN HAVANA. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 71 

thick walls towered far in the air, topped 
by a high, thick parapet. The only windows 
to be seen from the alley were about thirty- 
five feet from the ground, and were pro- 
tected by massive iron bars. 

Although not known to any of us at that 
time, as it was invisible from the street, 
there was a window opening from the second 
story on the asotea or flat roof over lower 
rooms in the front of the building. Through 
this window the escape of Miss Cisneros 
was finally effected, but it was not until a 
week after our survey that any suggestion 
looking to the use of this window was made. 

For the first week we scanned and re- 
scanned the outer walls, suggesting a dozen 
plans, all equally worthless. A daylight 
attempt was considered, and plans were 
made to get Miss Cisneros to the barred 
door opening into a small court just off the 
main entrance. 

Don Jose, the warden, was to be 
lured outside the door, lured further, into a 
state of temporary unconsciousness, and our 
end accomplished by a wild dash for liberty. 
This scheme would probably have worked 
but for the fact that Miss Cisneros was in- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



72 



HER RESCUE 



communicado, and was not permitted ' to re- 
ceive visitors, or even to come into the Sala 
de Justicia on the inner side of the door. 

The fact that the Havana arsenal, always 
under a strong guard, stretched its long 




^!!;^!^siii«i««wwii.iiiiwi.«, 




NO. I O FARRILL STREET. 



front across the end of O'Farrill street on 
the other side of Egido street, and that the 
barracks of a company of the Orden 
Publicos was located just back of Recojidas 
on Compostela street, made this plan de- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



BY KARI< DBCKER. 73 

cidedly uncertain as to results. And it was 
abandoned. 

As it appeared at this time absolutely im- 
possible either to get into the jail ourselves 
or to get Miss Cisneros out, it was con- 
sidered to have become a case of untar las 
manos, and a sturdy attempt was made to 
reach some of the guards or keepers with 
bribes, but nothing was effected. Finally, 
when it appeared as if the only possible way 
to secure the escape of the beautiful Cuban 
would be to dynamite a part of the build- 
ing, a note was smuggled in to her, as a 
last resort, asking if she could make any 
suggestion that could help us. 

In answer she sent the following message, 
in Spanish: 

My plan is the following: To escape 
to the roof with the aid of a rope, 
descending by the front of the house 
at a given hour and signal. For this 
I require acid to destroy the bars of 
the windows and opium or morphine 
so as to set to sleep my companions. 
The best way to use it is in sweets, 
and thus I can also set to sleep the 
vigilants. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



74 HEK RSSCUB 

Thret of you come and stand at the 
forners. A lighted eigar will be the 
signal of alarm for which I may have 
to delay, and a white handkerchief 
will be the agreed signal by which I 
can safely descend. I will only bring 
with, me the necessary clothes tied 
around my waist. This is my plan; 
let me know if it is convenient . 
Accompanying this letter was a plan 
drawn by herself showing the exact location 
of the window referred to. It was at the 
end of a second story apartment running 
along Sigua street on the side of the prison, 
but not extending clear to its front. The 
azotea, or flat roof, on which it opens is 
about twenty feet wide, and a high parapet 
along the front of the building hid this win- 
dow from sight in the street. 

No time was lost in acting on her sugges- 
tion. 

The idea of eating through an iron bar 
with acid was dismissed and the question 
then naturally presented itself as to how the 
bars of the window could be cut so as to 
permit her to crawl through. The height 
of the building also precluded the idea of 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 75 

letting her attempt to come down by her- 
self. Her plan was to use the rope on the 
flag-sta£E. 

Consequently it became absolutely neces- 
sary for us to gain access to the azotea if 
we were to succeed. To do this, it became 
immediately apparent, would necessitate 
the use of a house in the crooked little alley 
running around the jail. By the rarest 
good fortune I found on my next visit to 
the vicinity a vacant house immediately ad- 
joining the jail on the north side of O'Far- 
rill street. 

By the end of the next day the house was 
in our possession. As La Lucha, an 
Havana newspaper, naively remarked: 
"The lessees could find no one to become 
responsible for them, so paid two months 
in advance." 

Our gold pieces made this O'Farrill street 
palace ours for two months should we care to 
occupy it that long. Next day the deal was 
closed. A colored Habanero was sent to 
the house to whitewash, and besides the 
lime and brush he carried a light ladder 
about twelve feet long. The possession of 
this ladder was all that brought him on the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



76 HER RESCUE 

scene. When lie went away in the evening 
he forgot it (purposely) and it remained in 
the house. 

On Tuesday night, October 5th, we went 
into the squalid little den at No. i, fully 
prepared, as we believed, for all possible 
contingencies. 

Having the key, I went first and reached 
and entered the house without being 
noticed. Two of my assistants, Her- 
nandon and Mallory, followed about an hour 
later, but were so unfortunate as to find the 
door of No. 3, the adjoining house, standing 
open with two of the occupants gaping idly at 
the moon waiting for the arrival of the last of 
their household. As our two men passed them 
and disappeared into the house they became 
very much alarmed, seeming to imagine 
that the visit of the strange men to the 
house next door foreboded some pending 
calamity to themselves. 

Although it was now half -past twelve, the 
occupants of No. 3 remained awake busying 
themselves at first with barricading them- 
selves in. Finally, however, the tardy mem- 
ber of that household arrived and with much 
noise and clamor they went to bed. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARI< DECKER. ^^ 

It was fully half -past one o'clock before the 
noises of the neighborhood quieted down, 
and the evil place fell into a semblance of re- 
pose. At this time the moon was high in the 
heavens and as bright as the midday sun. 
Down toward the corner of the front of the 
Recojidas a large gas-lighted bracket against 
the side of one of the houses made visible 




THE LADDER OF ESCAPE. 

the smallest object in the dirty thorough- 
fare. 

Notwithstanding these disadvantages, 
however, we mounted the roof and pro- 
ceeded to business. 

CHAPTER V 

THE ATTEMPT THAT FAILED. 

The front of Recojidas lay at right angles 
to our house in O'Farrill street, but the pri- 
son building ran back of our building so 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



78 HER RESCUB 

that the walls were together. At this point, 
however, the guard wall of the Recojidas 
rose sheer twenty feet above our heads. It 
was protected on the top by a thick sprink- 
ling of broken glass bottles. 

This guard wall extended out from the 
front of our wall to a point ten or twelve 
feet distant, where it joined the azotea. To 
reach this latter point, therefore, it was 
necessary to throw the ladder diagonally 
across the right angle separating our roof 
from the azotea. This was the most ticklish 
part of the business, as the ladder was frail 
and thrillingly short. 

Finally the ladder was in position and the 
trip across began. No man engaged in that 
enterprise will ever forget the twelve-foot 
walk across that sagging decrepit ladder. 
At one time it swayed from the wall. Her- 
nandon was only saved from a terrible fall 
by the promptness with which the two men 
at the ends of the ladder acted. 

As it was a large piece of the weak cornice 
on which the ladder was resting, went clat- 
tering down into the street, waking the 
warden, who came hastily to the door. By 
this time the ladder had been withdrawn. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




AS MR. DECKER APPEARED IN HAVANA. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 8l 

Two men were left on the azotea of the jail, 
while the third was left on the roof of the 
house to handle our drawbridge and guard 
our retreat. 

A great gap opened in the face of the 
massive building as old Don Jose looked 
out into the quiet street. He stood there 
for a few minutes, with an absolutely un- 
necessary candle in his hand staring out at 
the moon and apparently greatly pleased 
with the beautiful aspect of the soft Cuban 
night. Then, convinced that all was safe, 
he turned and passed back into Recojidas, 
and thus passed unharmed through the most 
dangerous moment of his life, for every 
second that he remained in the street was a 
second fraught with death. 

Three forty -four calibre revolvers covered 
him and his discovery of our position on 
the roof would have called for his immedi- 
ate execution. Time was then allowed for 
the natural quiet to drift back upon the 
scene, and when finally everything had 
become normal, the work of getting the 
Journal's protege out of her loathsome dun- 
geon was begun. 

We crept softly across the roof to the win- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



82 HER RESCUE 

dow she had indicated. As we reached it 
we saw her standing before it. She was 
dressed in a dark colored gown and not 
easily seen in the gloom inside. She gave 
one glad little cry and clasped our hands 
through the bars, calling upon us to liberate 
her at once. She had been standing there 
for over two hours and a half, but her 
patience never deserted her, and she knew 
that aid was coming, as she could see us on 
the roof of the house No. i O'Farrill street. 

Bidding her be quiet, we set to work cut- 
ting through the iron bar between her and 
liberty. We selected the third bar on the 
left side of the window, and began cutting 
it near the bottom. Our progress was slow, 
and wearisome, and finally, after an hour's 
work, we found that we had only cut part of 
the way through. It was impossible to use 
the saw quickly, as the bars were not set 
firmly in the frame, and rattled and rang 
like a fire alarm every time the saw passed 
across the iron. 

At last a stir in the room she had quitted 
warned Miss Cisneros that it was best for her 
to retire again ; so, leaving us, she slipped 
a sheet about her and glided quickly back to 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARI, DECKER. 



83 




THE CHEST OF DRAWERS, 



her bed at the far end of the dormitory. 
Before going she begged us to return the 
following night and com- 
plete our work. 

We trusted to luck, hop- 
ing our anxious neighbors 
in No. 3 would not give 
the alarm, and that the cut 
bar would remain undis- 
covered. We had no means 
of knowing the next day 
whether or not our attempt 
of the night before had been discovered, but 
proceeded on the assumption that it had not, 
and so determined to carry out our plans to 
the letter. 

A lot of cheap second-hand furniture was 
purchased in one of the outlying suburbs 
and placed in our house. A huge porron 
decorated the tinajero, flanked on either side 
by a bottle of jenevra and a big bundle of 
hrevas. Our sideboard was set with plates 
and other crockery, and a chest of drawers, 
a folding table and a pair of canvas folding 
cots had been sent in. 

Wednesday was spent by each man ac- 
cording to his usual custom. It was steamer 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



84 HER RESCUE 

day — a day usually filled with labor from six 
o'clock in the morning until noon, when dis- 
patches to be wired from Key West were 
smuggled aboard the S. S. Olivette. On this 
day, however, I did nothing in the line of 
regular newspaper work, devoting all my 
time to preparing a code of ordinary sen- 
tences such as might be passed by the civil 
censor, and, to all appearances, as innocent 
as a new laid egg. These code-messages 
covered all possible contingencies that could 
be foreseen. 

I was stiff and sore that day, from the 
climbing and clambering of the night be- 
fore, and from lying on the cold stone floor 
of the hut in O'Farrill street. A piping 
hot bath and an alcohol rub-down put me in 
shape for the night's work, however, and by 
dinner time I was in perfect trim. 

Dinner was an embarrassment that night. 
All the Americans met in the hotel and 
several, who were living privately in the 
city, gathered about the table before the 
meal was ended. It was a matter of deep 
diplomacy to escape from them. Finally, 
however, I manged to get free from the 
crowd and going to my room took from un- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



BV KARI, DECKER. 85 

der -my mattresses a pair of Stilson 
wrenches, one of small size, the other the 
largest made for ordinary use. To conceal 
two heavy iron wrenches and a forty-four 
calibre revolver about one's person is not by 
any means an easy or simple matter, and by 
the time I reached the street I felt like a 
walking arsenal and hardware store com- 
bined. 

I took a cab and went at once to a little 
obscure plaza away from the centre of the 
town and there met the two men who were 
to work with me. We sat in the dense 
shadow of a heavy foliaged tree and talked 
over our plans in whispers. Finally we 
separated, each taking a different direction. 

CHAPTER VI. 

OVER THE LADDER. 

It was nearly 8 o'clock when Hernandon 
and I met before the little house in O'Farrill 
street. Mallory had preceded us and had 
lighted up the entire establishment. The 
barred window opening on the court in front 
of the jail was open, and in this Mallory 
could be seen by the inquisitive neighbors, 
bustling busily about, placing our scant 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



86 



HER RESCUE 




THE JAILER. 



Store of furniture so as to cause it to make 
the finest possible show. We made no at- 
tempt at concealment this night, but moved 
around openly and like 
men desirous of happy re- 
lations with their neigh- 
bors. Hernandon even 
indulged in a short chat 
with Don Jose, the warden 
of the jail, and proposed 
a joint debauch, to which 
the jailer was to be invited, 
having for purpose the in- 
toxication of that worthy. 
This proposition was rejected by Mallory 
and myself as undignified, and certainly not 
essential to the success of our plot. 

The three little alleys running around the 
jail were alive with creatures who later in 
the evening gave the impression of suffer- 
ing severely from insomnia. Three large 
dump carts were overturned in the alley 
in front of the Recojidas, and on and about 
these sat a number of Spaniards, negroes 
and Chinese, who discussed volubly and 
with many gestures the stirring topics of 
the day, the recall of Weyler, the demonstra- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



BY KARI, DECKER. 87 

tion in the Plaza de Armas, and the possible 
war with the United States. 

From a house to the rear of ours came 
the hacking, torturing coughing of a con- 
sumptive already well enfolded in the arms 
of death, while from within the jail wailed 
out upon the sultry air the querulous cry- 
ing of the baby of Don Jose. 

The night was still, hot and oppressive. 
Early in the evening a bank of heavy clouds 
gave promise of rain, but we were disap- 
pointed in our hopes, for by 9 o'clock the 
sky had cleared and the great round, white 
moon rode through the heavens in stately 
solitude, the black -blue of the dome above 
us unflecked by clouds. We sat and stood 
for some little while in front of the house, 
carefully watching for any sign that our 
work of the night before had been dis- 
covered. Hernandon and Mallory both en- 
tered into conversation with such of the 
neighbors as were just about us, but there 
was no evidence that any alarm had been 
given through our attempt of the previous 
night. Finally we went into the house, 
dragged our table to the window, and placing 
on it some candles, opened up a poker game. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



88 HER RESCUS 

The scene in O'Farrill street as seen by 
some chance passer-by at that moment 
might be staged by a master of realism 
without a single change. The foul street 
in front of the jail with its chattering deni- 
zens, half clad, cursing the heat, lighted in 
yellow patches by the bright glare of a 
street lamp, bracketed to the side of a house 
at the corner of the jail, the oblong window 
with its iron bars and three listless, perspir- 
ing Americans seen just within, gambling 
for matches as a foil for ennui, formed a 
stage picture which could have received no 
touch to make it more dramatic. 

The dramatic possibilities, however, were 
not noticed by those actually taking part in 
the performance. The strain at this time 
was terrific, but there was a tonic in the 
very danger itself. Several boxes of 
matches were emptied on the table, and for 
a time we gambled fiercely for these little 
bits of wax. Two orden publicos, lounging 
along the alley, looked in upon us through 
the open door, their gaudy blue and red uni- 
forms giving a bright touch of color to an 
otherwise sombre picture. 

The laws in Havana are very strict 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARt DECKER. 89 

against gambling, and we were careful to 
let no money be seen upon the table. 

The police officers stood by the door, 
looking curiously in for a few minutes. At 
last one of them, a Gallego, from the pro- 
vince known as the Ireland of Spain, be- 
cause of the quick wit of its people, asked 
us what we played, and queried us to some 
extent as to the legality of our game. We 
assured him we did not play for money, 
but for matches. 

The Gallego, however, knew the function 
of the chip in the great Amer- 
ican game. 

"I would like to have a box 
of those matches, ' ' he said, with 
a grin. 

This remark was rightly re- 
garded as a jest, and we did not 
answer save with a smile that 
might have meant anything. ^"Vi 

A moment later they loitered 

„ , ^, „ ^i_ . J THE jailer's wife. 

off down the alley, their swords 
clanking at their heels. We threw them a 
cheerful " buenos noches," which they an- 
swered in friendly fashion. 
Toward eleven we noticed a disposition 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



90 HER RESCUE 

on the part of our neighbors to retire and 
we gave them all possible encouragement. 
We went out into the Callejon for a few 
minutes to get a breath of fresh air. With 
a dangerous enterprise a few hours ahead 
and all sorts of grewsome possibilities in 
sight we could not but admire the beauties 
of that superb Cuban night. Across the 
corner where the light from the street 
lamp failed to fall, lay a broad patch of 
white moonlight, softening and toning down 
to a mellow picturesqueness a scene that 
was by day miserably squalid and without 
beauty. 

We closed and locked the door, barred the 
heavy shutters and began to prepare for our 
night's work. I have been asked how we 
felt on the verge of our enterprise. I don't 
know exactly, but my impression is that we 
were very gay in the early part of the even- 
ing ; that every paltry joke seemed delicious, 
and that nothing was too far fetched to set 
us choking with laughter. 

We first took off our shoes, and then, mov- 
ing as softly as possible, carried up on the 
roof the ladder and three-hinged boards to be 
used in helping Miss Cisneros to escape. The 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY EARI, DECKKR. 9I 

tools to be used were laid in the shadow of 
the parapet of the house, and everything was 
in readiness for the venture. Then we lay 
down upon the hard stone floor to pass the 
hours of waiting that must elapse before the 
actual work of the evening began. The 
lights were extinguished, and we lay in the 
semi-darkness of the little stone hut, talking 
occasionally in whispers, but for the greater 
part of the time silent. Hemandon, who 
had not slept at all the night before, fell into 
an uneasy sleep after a while. From time to 
time Mallory or myself went on the roof to 
take observations and report upon the condi- 
tion of the neighborhood. 

On one of these trips I noticed the carriage 
we had ordered to await us was standing di- 
rectly in front of the opening of O'Farrill 
street, on Egido street. The driver had been 
ordered to move a block away from the stand 
he had held the night before, the idea being, 
of course, to get him as far as possible from 
the scene of our operations in order not to at- 
tract suspicion. Instead of moving further 
toward the city, however, he stopped a block 
nearer us, and within a stone's throw of the 
house. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



92 HER RESCXIB 

We swore at the driver's stupidity. I do 
not think any one of us is a particularly pro- 
fane man, but oaths fell fast that night. 
That they had to be whispered or swallowed 
did not take anything away from their force. 
It was that kind of a night. 

It was determined to have some one go to 
the driver and to direct him to move further 
away, and this task was assigned me. I got 
quickly into my shoes and slipped out of the 
house. I found the carriage standing alone, 
with no sign that the driver was anywhere in 
call. I searched along Egido street for him 
and throughout the alley, but he had disap- 
peared. Hernandon later went out on the 
same mission, but he could not be found, 
and it was learned afterward that he had tied 
his horse there and had left the carriage for 
our use, while he waited to have it delivered 
in another part of the city after the night's 
work had been completed. 

At 1 130 o'clock we were all silent in the 
front room of our little shanty. We had done 
a lot of talking earlier in the evening, so 
there was nothing to say, but for an hour we 
had made conversation, like folks at an after- 
noon tea, simply because it was too dreadful 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 



93 



to sit still and say nothing. I do not recall who 
suggested the start, but at half past one o'clock 
we found ourselves standing, and every man 
was looking into the eyes of another man. 
There was no need of words. Every man 
knew that the uppermost thought in his fel- 
low's mind was : 

"Suppose they have 
discovered last night's 
work!" 

Crk— k— k— k! 

Hemandon was test- 
ing the cylinder of his 
revolver. It was like 
the "All's well" cry 
of the sentinels at the 
forts. Mallory's revolver 
and my own gave the 
clicking response. If it 
came to the worst, the 
pistols were in order 
anyhow. 

Still, without speak- 
ing, we moved out into th&fatio. 

" Damn the moon ! " 

It is hard to say which of us said that; we 
all thought it. 




THE ROAD TO LIBERTY. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



94 HER RESCUE 

CHAPTER VII. 

THE BARS ARE BROKEN. 

Then we took note of the situation. We 
were apparently the only people in the world. 

Over the city an enchanted spell had fallen. 

A strong white light fell on the roof of the 
jail and brought out with startling clearness 
the window through which the girl I was sent 
to rescue was to escape. 

As we stood leaning across the parapet of 
our house looking toward the azotea of the 
jail, we could plainly see, tied about the bars 
of the window, the white handkerchief which 
had been agreed upon as a signal. The mo- 
ment we saw that we knew that everything 
was all right within the jail ; that the cut bar 
had not been discovered, nor the attempt to 
drug the inmates of the room in which Miss 
Cisneros was confined. As the inside of the 
window was in darkness, however, it was im- 
possible to discover from where we stood 
whether Miss Cisneros was at the window or 
not. 

That white patch on the darkness of the 
window seemed to stare out of the night like 
a searchlight. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARI, DECKER. 95 

" How could they miss it ?" whispered Mal- 
lory. 

" Why, if a Spaniard saw that handerchief, 
it would take him until day after to-morrow 
to realize it was worth asking: about," was the 
whispered response. 

Somehow we could not feel as sure of that 
as we would have liked to. 

We spent a few minutes in accurately sum- 
ming up the situation before we set to work. 
At least a dozen windows commanded a view 
of the roof on which we were to work, and 
from one of them, the night before, had come 
many mysterious noises, as though some one 
within had frequently opened and closed the 
heavy shutters. There was the possibility 
that we had been watched and our attempt 
of the night before reported to the authori- 
ties. We tried to ascertain if any prepara- 
tions had been made to trap us, but appar- 
ently everything was quiet. 

From arsenal and barracks floated out every 
ten minutes the long, wailing cry of the sen- 
tinels: ' ' Sentinela alerta — a-ler-r-r-r-ta, " and 
then the answering call from a dozen other 
sentries. 

Everything being in readiness for our at- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



96 HER RESCUE 

tempt, tlie ladder was quickly raised and 
thrust across the parapet until it rested upon 
the cornice of the jail. In a second Heman- 
don, the lightest man in the party, had 
crossed and was standing on the roof of the 
jail, Mallory and I holding the ladder. 

When Hernandon turned around with his 
back to the window and leaned across the 
parapet to steady the ladder for us, we held 
our breaths. Just what we expected is hard 
to say. Had our work of the night before 
been discovered it was quite possible that in- 
stead of the gentle little Cuban girl there 
would be waiting at the window a select 
firing squad of guards. In the white moon- 
light we must have made conspicuous marks. 
Maybe, then, we were waiting for a crash 
and a flare from that window that would ef- 
fectually end the attempt to save Evangelina. 
There was no way of finding out, and I 
quickly followed on the vibrating ladder 
across the gap and stood beside Hernandon 
on the jail roof. Every window overlooking 
that roof was like the porthole of a man-of- 
war. 

From the point where we reached the 
roof to the window is perhaps thirty-five or 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




IN DRESS WORN THE NIGHT OF HER ESCAPE 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



BY KARI, DECKER. 99 

forty feet, and we quickly traversed this 
space, passing as quietly as cats in our 
stockinged feet. As we reached the window 
we saw Evangelina standing just within the 
window, her face drawn and white from the 
strain of suspense under which she labored. 
She had seen us plainly every time we came 
out upon the roof of our house, and feared 
every time we disappeared that we had given 
up the project. She reached out her hands 
to us with many little, glad cries, rippling 
out in whispered Spanish sentences, terms of 
endearment and friendship, and calling mul- 
tiplied benedictions down upon our heads for 
our efforts to save her. 

"It's easy enough to say be still," she 
murmered indignantly. " You haven't been 
locked up in here for a year." 

It was almost impossible to keep her quiet, 
and it was not until Hernandon sternly bade 
her cease talking that she became silent. 

We went to work quickly, and without the 
slightest waste of time. We carried two 
Stilson wrenches. With the smaller one I 
gripped the bar below where the cut was 
made and locked the handle of the wrench 
behind my leg. I then gripped the upper 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



lOO 



HER RESCUE 



part of the bar with the large wrench and 
swung all my weight forward upon the han- 
dle. The strain was more than Bessemer 
steel could have stood, and I felt the bar 
yield like cheese, then snap with a clear, 
ringing sound that we feared must have been 
heard at the palace. We dropped at once 
and lay listening for a few seconds but there 
was no alarm. I then 
caught the bar in my hands 
and pulled it towards me. 
Slipping it across my knee 
near the thigh, I grasped it 
firmly and straightened up. 
The bar came with me. 
Then, stooping, I placed my 
shoulder under, and, grasp- 
ing the crossbar above my 
head, drew myself up, bend- 
ing the bar well up above 
the opening. I then caught 
it with the wrench again 
and twisted it into a huge V. 
Evangelina was by this time on her knees 
in front of the opening I had made. While I 
was bending the bar back out of the way I 
had to stop and beat her hands off mine. She 




VIEW OF WINDOW, FROM 
WITHIN. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. lOI 

clutched the iron and tore at it in her endeav- 
ors to help me in a way that would have ex- 
hausted her had she continued. 

The moment the bar was out of the way 
she relaxed with a little moan and dropped to 
the floor inside the window. 

CHAPTER VIII. 

OUT OF PRISON. 

" Is the opening large enough ?" I asked, 
in a whisper. 

In response she thrust her head between 
the bars and drew her body partly after. In 
a moment she saw that she could easily pass 
through, and she looked up into our faces 
with a smile such as the devout may wear in 
sight of Paradise, but seldom is it given any 
man to see such a gleam upon the face of 
woman. 

By this time the fever of hurry was in all 
our veins. I quickly grasped Evangelina 
about the waist and lifted her through the 
bars. In a moment she was out upon the 
roof and was bursting into a joyous carol to 
freedom when I clasped my hand over her 
mouth, and, picking her up in my arms, car- 
ried her quickly across the azotea to where 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



102 HER RESCDB 

the ladder lay. Here no time was lost in 
leaving the jail roof. Hemandon lightly 
stepped across the swaying ladder and stood 
upon the parapet to receive her as she came 
across. 

Without the slightest trace of fear, Evange- 
lina climbed over the parapet and down upon 
the ladder. I reached far out and steadied 
her until she was started well upon her trip 
across. Then as I released her hand she ran 
quickly across, as though on solid ground, 
bending slightly forward, her arms out- 
stretched in the effort to keep her balance. 
As she reached the parapet Hemandon 
caught her in his arms and lifted her to the 
roof. 

" Mie zapatos! " she cried as her feet 
touched the cold tiles of the roof. " Berne 
mes zapatos! " 

She was not given her shoes at this time, 
however. We had spent every moment in 
the broad, white glare of the moonlight that 
we intended to .spend and felt an animal-like 
desire to get into the darkness. The ladder 
was drawn quickly back upon the roof and 
left lying there, together with the three 
hinged boards which were to have been used 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY EARI, DKCESR. I03 

to form a platform across the ladder for Miss 
Cisneros, but which were not used. Although 
none of us suspected it at the time, a revol- 
ver, almost as large as a Spanish field-piece, 
was left lying on the roof. 

Our party quickly assembled in the main 
room of the house on the floor below, and 
quick preparations were made for getting 
away. 

Within five minutes after helping Evan- 
gelina out of the window we were ready to 
leave O'Parrill No. i. Hernandon started 
first, as he was to drive the carriage. 
Silently they stepped out of the house, and 
Mallory and I softly closed the door and 
waited, listening. An hour seemed to elapse, 
and we heard no sound ; then suddenly from 
Egido street came a wild clatter and the 
staccato pounding of iron against cobbles, as 
the carriage dashed wildly away. We had 
not lost our nerve by any means at this time, 
but we were possessed of a feverish desire to 
get away as quickly as possible. Leaving 
the candle burning upon the tinajero and 
our household goods in unseemly disarray, 
we quit our house in O'Farrill street, never 
to enter it again till Cuba shall be free. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



104 



HER RESCtJE 



When the carriage containing Evangelina 
Cisneros rattled off over the cobbles of Egido 
street that moonlight Thursday morning one 




ON THE ROOF. 



of the men (the man I have called Hernan- 
don) sat upon the box. He was an American 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 10$ 

wto Spoke Spanish like a Castillano. He 
knew every turn and twist of the narrow, 
winding streets, and, taking a circuitous 
course about the city, finally rounded into 
the street in which was located the house 
selected as the hiding-place of Miss Cisneros 
while in Havana. 

The street was deserted for several blocks. 
Far away toward where the Recojidas lay in 
all its squalor, jostling a barracks and an 
arsenal, could be heard the plaintive wailing 
alerta of the sentinels. In all that still 
moonlit city that night that cry was the 
essence of concentrated sarcasm. It rang 
out from the sentry boxes as the carriage 
containing Miss Cisneros dashed off; it was 
heard again threading across the silence of 
the city as Miss Cisneros sprang from the 
carriage and disappeared through the door 
behind which a trusted servant had been 
waiting for hours. 

There had been sounds of revelry in that 
house that night. A reception had been held 
there during the evening, and in the late 
morning hours, as the guests left assuring 
host and hostess that various houses in 
Havana were at their disposition, a fright- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



I06 HER RESCTJE 

ened, trembling little maiden fluttered in 
througli the door and pressed flat against the 
wall within waiting for some one to welcome 
her or shelter her. 

CHAPTER IX. 

THROUGH PERIL TO SAFETY. 

As the last couple passed out of the house, 
she felt a gentle touch upon her arm and was 
quickly ushered into a room set apart for her 
exclusive use. In fact, a whole suite of 
apartments were reserved for her, and she 
was given the attendance of two servants 
during the time she remained in hiding, 

She entered this house on Thursday morn- 
ing about 3 o'clock, and remained there se- 
curely secreted until Saturday afternoon. 

In the mean time Hemandon was having 
adventures enough to fill a novel. Hardly 
had Evangelina left the carriage before he 
was hailed by a half drunken Spanish officer 
with a companion. 

Hernandon felt deeply grieved at the idea 
of carrying such freight, and turned them 
down harshly. 

" I'm going to the palace after the Captain- 
General, to take him for a moonlight drive," 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. I07 

fee growleclj and lashed his nag viciously. 
Twice after he had an opportunity to earn 
an honest peseta, but declined the chance. 

Long before dawn he joined Mallory and 
myself in the Plaaa Cristobal, and as the 
jangling little brass pots in the belfry of 
the neighboring church had untangled the 
hour of four the carriage had been turned 
over to the rightful driver, and, after a part- 
ing drink in an all night bodega nearby, we 
separated for the night. 

The period intervening until Saturday 
afternoon will never be forgotten by the five 
men who by this time were interested in 
getting Miss Cisneros from the island. 
A house-to-house search was being conducted 
in every section of the city. 

The other men engaged in the rescue were 
free from espionage, as they had not fallen 
under suspicion, but from Thursday midday 
I was followed by a couple of detectives who 
had been assigned to shadow me by the 
Havana police under orders from the Span- 
ish Minister at Washington. By this time it 
was generally known in Washington and in 
Havana that the girl had been rescued by the 
Journal, and every effort was made to detect 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Io8 HER RESCUE. 

the whereabouts of Miss Cisneros by shadow- 
ing me. For this reason I was unable to see 
Evangelina again face to face until I met her 
in New York. 

On the day she left her hiding-place I suc- 
ceeded in shaking off my shadows by using 
certain methods which would have been ridi- 
culed by a Pinkerton, but which were suc- 
cessful with the Spanish spies. 

The other two men who were with me on 
the night of the rescue did not join me on 
that afternoon, but until Miss Cisneros 
reached the wharf we were never twenty 
feet apart. We did not speak to each other. 

We sauntered along the principal streets of 
Havana, watching and guarding. The great- 
est fright of the entire occasion occurred as 
Miss Cisneros came out of the house in which 
she had been hiding. She was dressed as a 
young " Marinero," with blue shirt, flowing 
tie and a large slouch hat. Her hair was 
plastered under the hat with cosmetics. As 
she stepped out into the street a swift swirl 
of wind caught the hat and whirled it from 
her head. For a moment our hearts ceased 
to beat. Every man gripped his gun and 
waited. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



BY EARI, DECKER. Ill 

Quickly she caught the hat from the 
ground, jabbed it down on her head and 
started off jauntily and nonchalantly down 
the street. 

The few careless passers-by had failed to 
note the incident, and she was safely over 
this hurdle. 

All the way down Obispo street we fol- 
lowed her, guns swinging loose and ready at 
hand, a carriage following, ready for emer- 
gencies. Had she been detected it was our 
intention to rescue her again, place her in 
the waiting carriage and dash off. 

Fortunately nothing happened. It was 
nearly dark ; the short twilight was closing. 
The Seneca had waited three hours for 
freight and would wait another hour, and all 
things aided. 

We passed but few people and these were 
too much occupied with other affairs to 
notice us. It was the dinner hour of Havana 
and those not at table were hurrying to get 
there. 

Our greatest fear was that Evangelina's 
dentity would be discovered at the " Ma- 
china " wharf, which is always crowded with 
loitering Spanish officers. Fortunately, how- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



112 HER RESCUE. 

ever, as we came around from behind tlie 
tangled swarm of carriages that blocked the 
entrance, we saw that there were but few 
people in sight. A little knot 6f passengers 
had gathered on the landing stage, and were 
being besieged by a crowd of watermen. 
They were all late passengers going off in 
the delayed Seneca. 

The steamer lay far out in the harbor, a 
line of heavy smoke drifting back from her 
funnels, showing her readiness to sail. Over 
in Regla the lights were popping out in 
bright spots, and long, wavering reflections 
glanced and quivered along the waters of the 
harbor from the open portholes of the wait- 
ing boat. 

The short tropical twilight had died away 
and given place to the bright starry night. 

There was suddenly a bustle of prepara- 
tion on the wharf. The little propellers of 
the launch gave a few tentative whirls and 
the waiting passengers hurried aboard. 
Evangelina was in the crowd. We dared not 
go with her, as our presence on the ship 
would have attracted the attention of the in- 
spector. 

We sat down at one of the little marble- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 



113 



topped tables in front of Cafe Luz, which 
overlooks the 
harbor, and from 
there watched the 
launch as it scud- 
ded along over 
the quiet waters. 
We saw it draw 
alongside, and 
then strained our 
eyes to distin- 
guish the form of 
Evangelina, but 
could see noth- 
ing distinctly. 

Then we waited 
with our liquor 
untasted before 
us ; waited and 
watched. We saw 
the passengers 
disperse as they 
reached the deck 
— some going to 
their staterooms, 
others to the dining-room. Two figures 
moving about the head of the gangway 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



114 HER RESCUE. 

we easily identified as the two police 
inspectors, but we could not see anything 
clearly enough to determine whether or not 
Evangelina had made the attempt to go on 
board. 

Suddenly we saw two inspectors turn and 
enter the smoking-room on the upper deck, 
accompanied by a third person, undistin- 
guishable from where we were watching. 

Hardly had they left the gangway when 
we saw some one approach the ladder and 
signal the waiting boat below. 

In a moment a slim dot of a figure was 
seen to spring from the deck of the launch 
to the gangway platform and run with twink- 
ling feet up the ladder. 

A moment later the deck was clear and no 
one could be seen moving about. 

Then the two inspectors came out of the 
smoking room wiping their lips. 

We knew that nothing further could be 
done. 

Evangelina was on board the Seneca and 
the only danger lay in the discovery of her 
hiding place. 

We were all troubled, however, and felt ill 
at ease as long as the uncertainty of the sit- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



BY KARL DECKER. 



"5 



uation was sustained by the presence of the 
Seneca in the harbor. 

I separated from my companions and went 
back to my hotel alone. I found there quite 
a crowd of fellow 
Americans and sat 
down to dinner with 
them. 

It was now nearly 
seven o'clock and the 
strain w^ terrific. 

The Seneca had 
probably started, but I 
could not be certain 
that Evangelina was 
still on board. 

At this moment the 
hotel interpreter entered with much bustle 
and effusiveness. 

" The Seneca is off," he said. " There 
were a lot of Americans went away in her." 

' ' Was there any row of any sort before she 
left?" I asked. 

"No," he answered; " she got away with- 
out any trouble. The captain was swearing 
because he was late." 

As he spoke there came from the harbor 




INTERIOR OF NO. I O'FARRILL 
STREET. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Il6 HER RESCUE. 

three long, roaring, rolling blasts; hoarse 
and wheezy blasts ; sounds with which we 
were familiar. 

The Seneca was signaling the harbor going 
out. 

That night there was revelry in Havana. 

The Palacio Crystal had never held a live- 
lier party. 

Half a dozen Americans shared in the 
celebration of an event of which they were 
profoundly ignorant. 

Had they but known what cause there was 
for jubilation they would not have clinked 
glasses so quietly. 

Later that night there were American 
songs heard ringing through the streets of 
Havana, and we were roundly hissed when 
we forced our way into a ' ' baile " far out 
into the suburbs. 

The next morning I received a warning 
that an order had been issued for my ar- 
rest. 

This coupled with an imperative order 
from the Journal to return at once caused 
me to leave Havana. 

There was but one escape open, and I 
seized upon that and came away on the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BY KARI, DECKER. 1 1? 

Spanish steamer Panama, with a forged vise 
on my passport. 





Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



THE LirE or 

EVANGELINA ClSNEROS 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



CHAPTER I. 




TO FREE CUBA. 

■ HIS is the Story of my life. 
American women may 
find it interesting. It 
is at least true. I am 
not used to writing, but 
will tell my story as 
well as I can. I will 
try to make everything 
plain and easy to un- 
derstand, although it 
will be hard for any 
one who has never lived in Cuba to believe 
that some of the things which I must tell 
could really happen so close to the free 
country of America. 

To begin with, I am not a girl, as all the 
people who have been writing about me 
always say I am. I am a woman. I am 
nineteen years old. 

I was born in Puerto Principe. Puerto 
Principe is the capital .of a Province of 
Camiguey. It is a little city, where there 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



122 HER OWN STORY. 

were many happy people before the Revo- 
lution. Camiguey is said by Americans to 
be the Kentucky of Cuba. By that, I think, 
they mean that we have beautiful horses 
there, and that we are proud of the prettiest 
girls in Cuba. I am one of four sisters. My 
mother died before I can remember. They 
say she was a very little woman, and that 
she was exceedingly pretty. She had large 
eyes, and she was very slender, and she had 
the lightest foot in the dance of any girl in 
Camiguey. Her name was Caridad de Cis- 
neros y Litorre. My father's name was 
Jose Augustine Cossio y Serrano. There 
were four of us children, all girls. Flor de 
Maria was the eldest. She it is who has 
told me so much about my mother. Then 
came Carmen and then Clemencia, and then 
I. We were all very happy when we lived 
in Camiguey. It was always warm and 
pleasant there, but sometimes the trade-wind 
blows, and then it is well to stay in- 
doors. 

We girls had a little garden, and it was 
our pleasure to make the flowers grow. 
Flor de Maria made it her especial business 
to raise the beans and the peppers and the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



evAlJGfiI,INA CISNE&OS. 153 

many things that we of Cuba like to eat. 
My father had a little money, and we lived 
in a pretty house with thick walls to keep 
out the sun, and a court, with a fountain in 
it, where all of us children learned to walk. 
That is the first thing I can remember, the 
fountain. It leaped and sparkled in the 
sun, and I used to think it was alive and try 
to catch it, and make it stand still and talk 
with me. When I was in prison I often 
dreamt of the fountain which danced so 
gayly in the little court-yard. 

My father was a good man, and he loved 
his children. It was always a holiday for 
us when he came home. But he was never 
happy in Camiguey after my mother died. 
He thought first of going one place and then 
to another. He could not bear to stay in 
the little home where he first took her as a 
bride. So he sold it, and we went with him 
from one place to another all over our beau- 
tiful Cuba. At last we came to Sagua La 
Grande, a seaport on the north coast of the 
island. There we found an old friend who 
had known my mother when she was a little 
girl ; Rafael Canto y Nores was his name. 
He took us to his house, and his good wife 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



124 



HER OWN STORY. 



was like a mother to us. My father went 
to a large sugar plantation close by and be- 
came weighmaster there, and for seven 
years I lived with Senora Nores. She was 
very good to me. By and by my father 
was sent for to come to Cienfuegos. Cien- 
fuegos is on the south coast of Cuba, and 
there is an estate there which is the largest 
plantation on the island. It is called the 




THE SUGAR HOUSE AT SAGUA. 

Constancia estate. When he was settled at 
Constancia he sent for Carmen and me. 

My other sisters stayed with Signora 
Nores. 

My father had a pretty little house near 
the estate and Carmen and I kept it for him 
as well as we could. Senora Nores had 
taught me how to make tortillas and arrozcon 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEI<INA CISNEROS. I25 

polio and all of the good Cuban dishes. We 
had a happy time there in our little house ; 
for Carmen and me, and it was almost like 
playing in a doll's house. 

But my father was a strange man in some 
ways. He would have been better pleased if 
one of his children had been a son. He often 
looked at me, and took my head between his 
hands and said to me, "Evangelina, when I 
look at your brow it seems to me that you 
should have been my son and not my daugh- 
ter," and then I would laugh and put my 
hands at my sides and pretend to whistle, 
and my father would cover my mouth with 
his hand, for in Cuba it is not good for a 
young girl to behave as the boys behave. 

But for all that my father treated me more 
like a son than like a daughter. In the even- 
ing, when he had finished his supper, and 
we sat together he would talk to me 
about his business and his work at the 
plantation, and he would tell me of 
the things which vexed him, and of 
the things which had pleased him during 
the day. He talked much to me about 
Cuba, and many a time I have sat with 
my father until the moon arose, and 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



126 HER OWN STORY. 

listened to his stories of the ten-years' war 
against Spain, until every drop of hlood in 
my veins was afire with the love of my 
brave country. My father told me how he 
had kissed my mother good-bye. She did 
not even weep, as she stood at the window, 
waving her hand to him and crying "Viva 
Cuba!" while he went down the path — out 
to fight for his country. Often he told me 
how she used to write to him, and tell him 
of his children at home, and what they did 
and said, and of how she missed him and 
prayed for him ; but always he said the let- 
ters ended with the words, "Viva Cuba!" 

When he had told me these things his 
voice would be a little rough sometimes, 
and he would speak quick, and I knew that 
he was trying hard to keep from crying; 
then I always went and sat by him, and held 
his hand against my face, and he told me 
that I had eyes like my mother's eyes — ^like 
hers! 

In all these talks with my father he did 
not treat me as most Cuban fathers treat 
their daughters. He spoke to me freely and 
without reserve, and through him I knew 
something more of the world than most 



Digitized by Microsoft® 







Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 



129 



Cuban girls, wlio are brought up in the se- 
clusion of their homes, ever dream of know- 
ing. 

One day (it was in May, a very hot day 
in 1895) Carmen 
and I had pre- 
pared supper 
and my father 
came home at 
his usual hour. 

He did not 
kiss me when 
he came into the 
house, and when 
we were at the 
table he sat a 
long time with 
out speaking. 

I knew that 
there was to be 
war in Cuba. 
My father had 




FATHER AND DAUGHTER. 



told 



me so. I had heard 
his friends sitting in the shadow of 
the house and talking to him about it. 
When he did not speak to me as usual that 
night I knew that something had hap- 
pened. I wished to ask him what it was, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



130 HER OWN STORY. 

but I was afraid. All at once he pushed 
away his plate, and jumped up from the 
table. He caught me by the shoulders and 
looked straight into my eyes. 

"My little girl," he said, "I am going to 
fight for Cuba." 

I put my arms round his neck and kissed 
him, and then, I think, I cried a little, and 
my father kissed me and did not speak. 

"Father," I said, "I am going with 
you," and from that moment my father 
knew that my mind was made up. 

He never tried to persuade me not to go. 
He told me again of my mother and of her 
courage and her devotion to the cause of 
Cuba, and of his young sister Soleded, who 
had fought by his side in the former war. 

That night we sat late and talked of many 
things. 

CHAPTER II. 

MY FATHER IS SENTENCED TO DEATH. 

After that my father's friends came 
often to the house. There were fifteen of 
them, all true patriots ; all but one — he was 
a Mexican. 

I never knew his name. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGB;r,INA CISNEROS. I3I 

He was about fifty years old, tall and very 
thin. He had a nose like the beak of a bird 
of prey, and his eyes were the eyes of a 
hawk. I did not like him ; but my father 
and his friends seemed to think him a de- 
voted patriot, so I said nothing. We held 
our meetings in secret — sometimes at one 
house, sometimes at another. I would take 
my guitar and play or sing, and my 
sister Carmen would dance, and we would 
laugh and pretend to be making merry to 
make the Spanish soldiers, who were always 
watching us, believe that we thought of 
nothing but music and laughter. 

We were planning to go and join the Cuban 
army on the twenty-second of June. My 
father had arms and ammunition hidden in 
different places in the neighborhood. He 
left every morning at day break and re- 
turned at dusk. One night, when he was 
coming home through the cane-fields, two 
Spanish soldiers rode up to him and took 
him prisoner. The Mexican was a spy, and 
had betrayed the whole plan of action. 

This happened on the twenty-first of 
June, the very day before we were to leave 
for the front. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



133 HER OWN STORY. 

The soldiers searched my father, and 
found upon him papers which gave into 
their hands the whole plot of our rising. 

He begged his captors to let him go home 
and tell his children what had happened ; 
but they struck him with the flats of 
their swords and forced him to hold his 
tongue. 

■Just after dusk a little Cuban boy ran to 
the house and told me that he had seen my 
father, riding out of the cane-field, between 
two Spanish soldiers. I sent word to our 
friends, but it was useless to talk the matter 
over, for we had been betrayed and there 
was nothing that we could do. 

That night I did not go to bed. I walked 
up and down in our little living room till 
daybreak. I never knew how many hours 
there were between sunset and the gray of 
dawn before. 

In the morning I learned that the soldiers 
had taken my father to jail in Cienfuegos. 
After I had made the breakfast and com- 
forted my sister Carmen (for she was fright- 
ened and cried, and said the Spanish 
soldiers would kill us, and she would not 
eat), I made a little dish of eggs and meat and 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEI<INA CISNEROS. I33 

put it in a covered basket and walked to 
Cienfuegos to see my father. They would 
not let me in to see him, so I gave the 
breakfast to the man who was on guard 
at the prison door and asked him to give it 
to my father, and tell him that I had been 
there, and that I would come again, and 
always again, until I could see him. The 
man on guard promised me that he would 
do as I asked. He was a good-natured, 
shining-faced man with deep dimples, and 
he laughed good-humoredly, when I turned 
round at the foot of the steps, and saw him 
taking the leaves off the dishes and eating 
what was beneath. 

After that I went back many times, and I 
never said anything to the guard about the 
food, but I always brought an extra 
portion, one for him and one which I hoped 
he would take to my father. When I had 
been many times they gave me a pass into 
the prison, and after that I went often to 
see my father and to comfort him. One 
day when I went to him he stood in his 
cell looking through the bars and watching 
for me. I knew by his face he had bad news 
to tell — I did not think it was good news. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



134 



HER OWN STORY. 



He put his hands through the bars and 
took both of my hands in his. 

" Evangelina, " he said, "you are a sol- 
dier's daughter; now you roust behave like 
one; I am sentenced to be shot." 

I tried very hard not to show how I felt, 
it seemed to me that my heart stopped beat- 
ing. 

I talked with him a little while, and then 
I went away to Santa Clara, where Captain- 
General Cam- 
pos was per- 
sonally in com- 
mand of the 
Spanish forces. 
I went to the 
Spanish head- 
quarters again 
and again and 
yet again. But 
I never could 
see the Cap- 
tain-G e n e r a 1. 
He was always 
away, or he was 
busy, or he was tired, or he did not care 
to see me. 




LIEUT. CAMPOS. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 135 

At first the Spanish soldiers were only- 
sullen, but when I had been many times 
they grew to think that my coming was a 
joke, and they laughed at me, and told me 
to have patience, and when the sun had 
melted the earth away I might perhaps 
have an interview with the Captain-Gen- 
eral. I went early in the morning and at 
noon and in the evening I went ; but it was 
all of no use — I could not see the Captain- 
General, and my father was in prison under 
sentence of death, and I knew that if I did 
not see the Captain-General he would be 
taken out and shot like a blind dog. 

Many nights I could not sleep, for every 
time I shut my eyes, I would start up 
awake, thinking I heard a volley of rifle-shots. 

One day, when I had risen at daybreak, 
and had waited on the steps of the Spanish 
headquarters for three hours, hoping to 
catch the Captain-General as he came up the 
stairs, I was very faint of a sudden, and I 
sank down on the steps. One of the soldiers 
began to laugh, and asked me whether my 
heart was as weak as my body. He called 
me a cruel and degrading name, and I 
sprang to my feet in an agony of despair. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



136 HER OWN STORY. 

A young man was coming up the steps ; he 
held out his hand to stop me, and turned 
to the soldier who had laughed at me and 
rebuked him severely. 

"Bark when your master speaks, you 
dog, ' ' he said, and then he turned to me and 
asked me why I was waiting there. 

I told him that my father was to be 
shot, and that I wanted to see the Captain- 
General. I told him how I had come there day 
after day, and how I had waited and waited 
until my heart was sick, and he told me that 
he was the son of the Captain-General, and 
that he would intercede with his father for 
me. I waited in the ante-room while the 
young man went in to see his father. 
When he came out he told me that his 
father would not see me then, but that he 
himself would do his best to get my father's 
case looked upon with clemency. Another 
day I went to the headquarters and found 
the young man standing on the steps wait- 
ing for me. He handed me a paper. It 
was a commutation of my father's death 
sentence to one of imprisonment for life in 
Ceuta, Spain's penal colony in Africa. I 
tried to thank the young man, but some- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



BVANGBWNA CISNEROS, I37 

thing in my throat beat so that I could not 
speak, and he took my hand and kissed it, 
and when he raised his head I saw that 
there were tears in his eyes. 

I never saw him again, but I have prayed 
for him every day since that hour. 

CHAPTER III. 

WHAT HAPPENED IN HAVANA. 

For three or four days after the young 
man handed me the commutation papers for 
my father I was at home asleep. I think I 
slept twenty hours out of the twenty-four. 
I knew that he would not be sent to Africa 
until the war-ship left to go to the penal 
settlement there. I had friends who kept 
watch and who promised to tell me when it 
came near the time for the warship to sail. 
I was so tired with all the excitement and 
anxiety, but, most of all, with the great re- 
lief which had come suddenly upon me, that 
I could not hold up my head ; so I slept, all 
day and nearly all night, and my dear sis- 
ter Carmen made me the good coffee and 
the tortillas, and fed me as if I had been a 
baby, and indeed I felt quite as weak as 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



138 HER OWN STORY. 

one. M)' friends came to the house and 
tried to see me, and to devise some way to 
prevent my father from being sent to 
Africa, but Carmen would not let them see 
me. She stood at the door like a little watch- 
dog, and she made herself very stem and 
would not listen to anything except that I 
should eat and that I should sleep. She is 
a good little woman, my sister Carmen. 
Some day she will make someone a good 
wife, and then I shall go and help her to 
take care of the little ones. 

I knew that my father would never live 
to get to Africa. Every one in Cuba knows 
about the dreadful Spanish colony there. 
No man, with a heart in his breast, could 
exist for one year in that hideous place. 
There are fevers there and horrible sick- 
nesses of all sort. The most dreadful crim- 
inals are sent there from Spain, and the 
Spanish officials of the settlement have no 
more regard for the common decencies of 
life, among the prisoners, than though the 
men exiled there were so many starving 
wolves. 

I knew that I must do something to keep 
my father in Cuba if he were to be kept 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EV ANGELINA CISNEROS. I39 

alive, but first, I knew, that I must sleep and 
eat to get my strength, before I could even 
think of anything to do. 

In a few days I was able to get out of 
bed. 

One afternoon, early in the twilight, 
some friends came to see me, and told me 
that there was a new Captain-General in 
place of the one who had commuted my 
father's sentence. They said that he was 
called General Weyler, and that he was a 
courteous man and kindly. When I heard 
that I went to Havana, and presented my- 
self at the palace and asked to see this Gen- 
eral Weyler. The guards at the palace let 
me in after a moment's hesitation. I saw 
General Weyler, and I told him that my 
father was an old man, and that he was very 
sick, and that he could not live to be taken 
to Africa. 

General Weyler listened to me in perfect 
silence. 

He did not ask me one single question, 
but when I had finished he nodded once or 
twice, turned to his secretary, and said: 
"Give this girl an order to have her father 
transferred to the Isle of Pines." 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



t46 SER OWN STORV. 

I tried to thank him, but he simply- 
nodded and dismissed me with a wave of 
his hand. I don't know whether I laughed 
or cried when I was outside the palace. 
This I know, I ran every step of the way to 
the prison in Havana where my father was 
waiting for the transport ship. When I came 
in with the order my father turned white 
as a ghost, and afterwards he told me he 
thought I had lost my mind. I was so ex- 
cited and laughed so much and cried and 
was so bewildered. 

I went and lived with some friends of 
my father (the Revira family) for twenty- 
nine days, while I was in Havana. My 
little sister Carmen was with me. 

I shall never forget the time I spent in 
Havana. It was such a strange experience, 
it seems even now like one of those dreams 
one has when one is between sleeping and 
waking. The theaters and the concerts of 
the band were going on just the same as 
ever. In the afternoon, after the siesta, I 
could go down to the plaza and see the 
gay crowd of promenaders, and it was hard 
to realize that just outside the gates men 
were being mutilated and women and little 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGBLINA CISNEROS. 



141 



toddling, frightened children were being 
butchered. The Havana ladies are all very- 
beautiful, and they dress in gay, bright 
colors and soft, thin materials, which make 
them look like the flowers which grow so 
plentifully in every tiny 
garden there. There 
were parties and riding 
frolics and everywhere 
one saw the American 
tourists on their bicycles - 
going out before break- 
fast to see where a battle 
had been fought. 

The streets were full 
of swaggering, leering 
Spanish soldiers, but 
otherwise Havana seemed 
as peaceful as a convent waiting. 

garden ; yet every day 
or two I read in the paper which was pub- 
lished there, some little notice saying that 
on that morning So-and-So was executed 
for rebellion or disloyalty to the Spanish 
Government. 

One morning I was awakened just at sun- 
rise by a sharp volley of firing. I called 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



142 HER OWN STQRY. 

out to one of the family, in the room next to 
mine, and asked her what it meant. She 
said, "Oh, it is some prisoner; they are 
shooting some one at the fort. ' ' 

Every few days they shot some one 
at the fort. Sometimes it was a man in 
the prime of life, with a wife who crept along 
outside the fortress wall and prayed for 
strength to bear the hearing of the shot 
that killed her husband. Sometimes, and 
not too seldom, it was a boy sixteen or 
seventeen years old. They led them out, 
blindfolded, and stood them up against 
the wall, and they said they stood there 
like little heroes, and never flinched when 
the order was given to fire. 

We heard of many heroes during those 
days in Havana. Our talk was so com- 
monly of bloodshed and murder and pillage 
and hideous outrage that it was a strange 
day that brought no new story of human 
agony for us to hear. At last they came 
and told me that my father was going to the 
Isle of Pines with about fifty other political 
prisoners under an armed escort, and that 
Carmen and I might go with him. That 
was a happy day for us. We bade our 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 145 

friends, who had been so good to us in 
Havana, good-bye, and started with light 
hearts for the Isle of Pines. 

CHAPTER IV. 

LOVE AND PRISON BARS. 

To get to the Isle of Pines you must 
go across Cuba to Batabano, a seaport on 
the south side of the island. I had been 
there before. It is not a pretty place, like 
the little towns on the sea-shore in this coun- 
try, but a dirty, ugly hamlet where the 
sponge-fishermen stop. It is nearly all on 
wharves and docks, and the sponges are 
piled up there to rot in the sun, for 
that is the way they get them ready for 
market. 

There were sixty prisoners to go to the 
Isle of Pines. My father was among them. 
I thought my heart would break when I saw 
them come out. Their arms were bound 
behind them so tight that it seemed the 
cords must cut into their flesh. 

They were tied , thus, four abreast — like 
the yoked cattle that haul the big logs in 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



146 



HER OWN STORY. 



eastern Cuba. They marched by me, fifteen 
such lines, each rank tied to the one in 
front, with a guard of soldiers to shoot 
down any who tried to get away. On the 




sidewalks there were many people who 
knew my father and the other prisoners, 
but the captives dropped their eyes, so 
they should not be spoken to, because it 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 147 

was a dangerous thing for any Cuban to 
show interest in a prisoner who is being 
sent away tor rebellion. My sister Carmen 
and I were allowed to go along. Carmen 
was very brave ; braver than I was. I 
thought my heart would break when I 
saw my father pass, with the sweat-drops 
brought out on his face by the agony 
of those tight cords. A train was waiting 
for us. It was a very odd-looking train. 
Not such an one as I have traveled on 
in this country. At the head, right next to 
the locomotive, was something that looked 
like a big square boiler. On the sides there 
were long narrow holes. It was what they 
call a traveling fort. The sides of this car 
are all of iron and the little windows are 
for the soldiers to shoot through if the 
rebels attack the train. Then came third- 
class passenger coaches, very small and 
very dirty, and at the end was another 
traveling fort. 

They put the prisoners in a car, and some 
soldiers got in with them. There were 
soldiers on all the platforms, for the great 
General Maceo was, at that time, taking all 
the towns in Pinar del Rio, the western 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



148 HER OWN STORY. 

province of Cuba, and the Spaniards did 
not know where he would attack next. 
Every train was guarded as ours was 
guarded. Before we started a locomotive 
went ahead, so that if there were dynamite 
on the track, the train would not be lost. 

I had been so miserable I had not eaten 
anything that morning, and, as it was 
a very warm day and the cars were close 
and crowded, I was very wretched. The 
guard in charge of the prisoners had gotten 
some fruit somewhere and they were eating 
it. I suppose I must have looked at it, for 
the lieutenant came over to me and offered 
me some bananas and sapotes. I thanked 
him the more because the other soldiers had 
been the reverse of respectful to me. 

"Don't you feel so bad," the lieutenant 
said tome. "Nothing is going to happen 
to the prisoners. To which one of them are 
you related?" 

I pointed out to him my father. Before 
he went back he spoke very kindly to me. 

"Don't fret, little girl," he said, "the 
Isle of Pines is a very pleasant place, 
and they will only keep your father until 
the war is over. Just be brave, and I will 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 149 

see that everything is done for your father 
that we can do. ' ' 

The next time I looked at my father he 
was unbound, nor did they bind him again 
until we reached Batabano and my kind 
lieutenant was relieved. I do not know this 
officer's name, but I am sure that God will 
reward him for this kindness to a lonely 
girl on a sorrowful journey. Near Rincon, 
which is the junction where the railroad 
from Pinar del Rio comes in, the train jour- 
neyed very slowly. We went over a bridge 
that seemed very unsteady. My friend, the 
lieutenant, came back to where I was sitting 
and told me not to be afraid. 

"What is it?" I asked him. 

"Some of your rebel friends, senorita," he 
told me, "blew up this bridge and wrecked 
the train ahead of us. It has just been re- 
paired, and we have got to be careful for 
fear of shaking it down." 

I looked out of the window on the other 
side of the bridge, and there was a train off 
the track and half burned. 

' ' Don't look that side, ' ' said the lieutenant. 

I could not help looking. There were 
some dead men there. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



150 HER OWN STORY. 

After about five hours we reached Bata- 
bano. It is only thirty miles from Havana, 
so you can see we must have gone quite 
slowly. At Batabano we were to take the 
steamer Nuevo Cubano to the Isle of Pines, 
but when we got there the steamer was gone. 

It was Maceo again. 

They were hurrying troops to fight him as 
fast as they could. A regiment had been 
placed on board our steamer and hurried 
away to the west, so for twenty-four hours 
the poor prisoners and my sister and myself 
had to wait on the wharf. The prisoners 
were all bound again, as they had been in 
Havana, and the soldiers, with their loaded 
guns, stood between us and the shore, to 
make sure that nobody escaped in the night. 
It was not very cold, but it was very uncom- 
fortable. We were given food — the rations 
of the soldiers who had taken our steamer. 
They call it rancho. It was a kind of stew 
made out of rice, sweet potatoes and a little 
meat with judias, a kind of bean. Before 
he went away the kind lieutenant gave one 
of the guards a fresh pineapple. 

"That is for the little ones," he said; then 
he nodded to me and went away. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 



ISI 



As soon as he was gone the soldier peeled 
the pineapple and he and another soldier 
ate it. 

They threw us the skin. 

"Pineapples are bad for little girls," the 
soldier said, and all the other soldiers 
laughed. It seemed as if that night would 
never end. Whenever any of us moved 




CISNEROS HOUSE IN ISLE OF PINES. 

the soldiers cried out "What are you doing 
there?" 

And we were afraid they would shoot 
into the prisoners, so we kept as quiet as 
we could. 

The next morning the little steamer re- 
turned and we were marched on board 
her. It is only a short trip to the Isle of 
Pines, and we were not ill-treated on the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



152 HER OWN STORY, 

Steamer. On board the steamer they per- 
mitted us to talk to the prisoners. My 
father told me to be cheerful, that every- 
thing was coming out all right, and that we 
would not be prisoners at all in the Isle of 
Pines. 

At last we reached the little harbor, and 
I saw Santa Cruz of the Pines, our future 
home. It looked very beautiful, and did not 
seem like a prison at all. The prisoners 
were released after being taken to the 
Governor's office. We walked up the main 
street, from the wharf, to a long mud-house, 
which used to be a hotel, before Santa Cruz 
was made a penal settement. This was to 
be our future home. It had been cut up 
into six little houses. The first one was 
a grocery store, the next a barber shop. 
There was a prisoner's family living in the 
next, and the fourth house was where my 
father, my sister and myself were to live. 
On the side was a carpenter's shop and a 
doctor's office. The tenants were all exiles 
like ourselves. 

That was my home until July; two 
months. It was like other Cuban houses, 
with a tiled roof and a big piazza. Our 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 153 

house consisted only of two rooms, a front 
room and a bedroom which opened on 
the little yard where we did our cooking. 
My life, there, was very simple. I was my 
father's housekeeper and that was all I had 
to do, and for the rest of my time I would 
sit in a rocking-chair on the piazza and 
watch the people walk up and down the 
road. I noticed after a few weeks one 
young man, who seemed always in front of 
our house. He had a black mustache, and 
I thought I had never seen a finer Cuban 
gentleman than he was. He kept looking 
up at me, and I pretended that I could not 
see him at all. When a young man in Cuba 
is anxious to make a girl's acquaintance he 
walks up and down in front of her house 
like that. 

Vender listas they call it, because the men 
who peddle lottery lists walk up and down 
that way. He kept smiling at me, and after 
a while, when he had walked this way several 
days, I went inside the house, when he came 
and stood at the window. 

Then he came up onto the piazza, and 
asked me if we were comfortable. 

The house, he explained, belonged to his 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



IS4 



HER OWN STORY. 



uncle, and he told me his name was Emilio 
Betancourt, and that he also was a prisoner 
on the island. After that he came up very 
often and talked to me through the window- 
grating. 

You see, I had no mother or guardian 
with me or he could 
have come inside. 
I suppose he said to 
me just what an 
American gentle- 
man would say to 
an American girl. 
I only know I was 
glad to hear it, and 
my father consented 
that we should be 
engaged. Emilio 
thought he might 
be pardoned and 
when we were free 
we were to marry. 
After that he came 
a great deal of course, and I was very 
proud of him. 

It is all over now, because I found out 
that he was not the brave Cuban patriot I 




BETANCOURT. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEI,INA CISNEROS. 155 

thought him, but was willing to save his 
own life at the price of the lives of his fel- 
low-soldiers and his betrothed. 

Things were very peaceful with us for 
quite a while. Governor Menendez was in 
military command of the Isle of Pines, and 
he did not molest us as long as the prisoners 
obeyed the regulations. My worst days 
were to come, when this Governor left us. 

CHAPTER V. 

THE ARRIVAL OF COL. BERRIZ. 

One afternoon Emilio came to see me. He 
seemed troubled and excited. I asked him 
what was the matter, and he said that a new 
military governor had been appointed. He 
did not know very much about this new 
ruler — Col. Jose Berriz. The other exiles 
came in, and yet no one seemed to have any 
definite information. Of course, there was a 
great deal of gossip. I remember that 
Emilio said that Col. Berriz had gained his 
appointment through Capt. -Gen. Weyler. 
He was a nephew of Gen. Azcarraga, the 
Minister of War in Canovas del Castillo's 
Cabinet, and, of course, he had but to ask 
for a place to secure it. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



156 HER OWN STORV. 

This was the talk among the prisoners, 
and, of course, we all feared what might 
happen when this new ruler came to take 
charge of us. A prisoner is so helpless — and 
that is the most terrible part of it — that one 
must fear everything and tremble at every 
sound. The men among the exiles said that 
Col. Berriz was a coward and that was the 
reason he had had himself made governor of 
the Isle of Pines — so he would not have to go 
into battle and fight. I do not know this, 
but I think he must have been a coward. 
Had he not been a coward, he would not 
have acted as he did. Brave men do not 
attack girls, who do not carry swords and 
cannot defend themselves. 

I must tell you about this man. for it was 
he who brought about my imprisonment. 
And yet I hardly know how to tell you about 
him. When I was in prison I used to try 
and study out how it had all happened — and 
even to-day I do not quite understand. 

The first time I saw him was one morning 
when I was standing in the doorway with 
Carmen, my sister. Among the political 
prisoners was a Cuban, who was secre- 
tary to the new military governor. It was 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



gVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 



1S7 



not considered dishonorable for him to take 
that position, for the prisoners must do the 
best they can. This man's name was Felix 
Arias Sagrera. I knew him as one of the 
exiles and as one who was supposed to be 
a faithful friend of Cuba. 

This morning Sagrera passed our little 
house; in his company was a short, ugly, 
dark, little man with bushy hair and black 
whiskers on his 
cheeks. He looked 
very much like Capt.- 
Gen. Weyler. 

As they passed the 
house he glanced up 
at me. 

" Heavens," I ex- 
claimed to Carmen, 
my sister, " what 
awful green eyes. " 

Sagrera came back 
alone in. a little while 
and asked us if we 
had noticed his com- 
panion. 

"That is Berriz," 
he said. " Don't you think he is a beauty ? " 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



158 HER OWN STORY. 

I did not answer. 

' ' He would make a beautiful corpse, any- 
how," said Sagrera. " He is worse than the 
other one." 

Sagrera was an old acquaintance of my 
father's. We had known him in the happy 
time before the war, and we trusted him as 
Cubans trust their friends. It did not sur- 
prise us to hear him talk thus bitterly, for as 
far as words go he was the stanchest patriot 
that ever suffered for his country. We were 
unguarded in our conversation before him, 
thinking we had nothing to fear from one of 
ourselves. 

The next day Sagrera was back again. 

" Evangelina, " he said, "you have made 
a conquest. The governer is in love with 
you already." 

' ' He may keep his love, for all of me ; the 
old Green Eyes," I answered. 

That same day Berriz passed the house on 
horseback. He looked up at me and said out 
loud: " There is the prettiest little rebel of 
the war." 

I went in doors immediately, and the Gov- 
ernor rode on laughing. 

What happened three days later I do not 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 



159 




THE CISNEROS ROOMS. 



like to write about, only this is the true story 
of my life, and I must try and make you un- 
derstand what hap- 
pened. Then I did 
not clearly under- 
stand, but I am glad 
I carried the dagger 
my father gave me, 
and I think it right 
for a woman to be 
armed in war. Some- 
times she must fight 
for herself as well 
as for her country, I would rather have 
died at once than have had my father think I 
could not fight for myself and my country. 
I know what my dear mother would have 
done, because she would have been braver 
than I was, but I thought of her and my dear 
father, and did what I could. When he 
caught me by the wrist — 

But I forget, I have not told you what hap- 
pened before. I am trying to write this 
history as well as I can, but at times I forget 
and cannot make the facts come in the order 
they should. It was so crowded and hurried 
and always it seemed that we were walking 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l6o HKR OWN STORV. 

under the shadow of death. Only father 
always wanted to die with a sword in his 
hand and I — because I was a woman, he 
said — could only tell my beads and pray for 
him and work for him. 

Soon after the Governor stopped at my 
door and spoke to me. 

" This is very comfortable for a prison, eh, 
Evangelina ? " he said. 

"Yes, Colonel Berriz," I replied politely, 
for we were in his power, and I did not want 
to offend him needlessly. 

" I make it as easy as I can for prisoners, 
and might do more, but I observe no sign of 
gratitude." 

" The prisoners are grateful for your clem- 
ency, Colonel Berriz." 

" I hate to lock people up," he said, " but 
is a Governor to be the only one who sufTsrs?" 

"My father is calling; I must go," I said, 
to end the unwelcome conversation, and hur- 
ried to my room. 

The next day my father was arrested with- 
out warrant or charge, and was put in the pro- 
tectorado jail for exiles. This was early in the 
morning. He knew nothing of what Col. 
Berriz had said, because I was afraid to tell 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



BVANGBLINA CISNEROS. 163 

him. Before noon I called at the prison. I 
asked the head jailer why my father had been 
taken to a cell. 

" Ask the military governor," he said. 

I went home, weeping all the way, for I 
did not know what to do. While Carmen and 
I were weeping together in our room, Sa- 
grera came in and called to us. This was the 
Cuban who had taken the position of secre- 
tary to Col. Berriz. He was my father's old 
friend, and I ran to him and asked him what 
was to be done. 

He advised me to go to Col. Berriz and 
plead for my father's release. 

I wanted to send word to Emilio, but there 
seemed to be no time. He was not at his 
house. One of the prisoners — a very old 
man who had been in the Ten Years' War 
with my father — said he would go to Berriz. 
When he came back he would not speak to me 
nor give me any knowledge of the governor's 
answer. He sat down with his head in his 
hands, and told me my father was dead. 

Sagrera spoke up and said that my father 
was not dead, but that if he were to be saved 
I must see the military governor at once. 
I had no hat — no mantilla. I remember I 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



i64 



HER OWN STORY. 



ran bareheaded all the way. The guards let 
me pass, and I was admitted to the office 
where Col. Berriz sat. 

Berriz received me courteously and spoke 
pleasantly. 

' ' "Why is my father arrested, Colonel Ber- 
riz ? " I asked, as soon 
as we were face to 
face. 

" What does it matter 
why," he answered," as 
long as he has such a 
daughter to intercede 
for him ? He is no 
longer under arrest." 

Berriz called an or- 
derly and directed him 
to carry an order for my 
father's release. 

" You see I can refuse 
you nothing. You will 
come to me again, and 
I will judge of your gratitude. " 

He looked at me in such a way that my 
thanks almost stuck in my throat. 

It almost seemed as though we were to be 
happy again but when I told my father all 




A SPANISH GUARD. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 1 65 

that had happened, he said that I must al- 
ways carry my dagger and that it was not 
hard to die, and that if I died I should see my 
mother and he would come to us there . 

For a few; days we saw nothing more of 
Col. Berriz. I never went out of doors, but 
every morning my father had to go to the 
inspection of the prisoners. 

Again he was arrested; there was no 
charge against him — nothing. 

Sagrera came. 

" Your father is to be sent to Chaferinas," 
he said, "the penal colony in Africa." 

I did not know what to do ; I went away 
alone for a while and then I called Carmen, 
because her words seemed to make me 
braver and better. So 1 kissed her and told her 
she must lie down and I went out andtold Sa- 
grera he must send Emilio to me. He would not 
go and said my father would be sent to Africa 
and it would be my fault. But Carmen went 
andtold Emilio — she could go because no 
one, not even the rough negroes, would speak 
harshly to her — no one ever spoke that way 
to Carmen. 

Emilo came, but there were guards with 
him, and he dared not talk. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l66 HER OWN STORY. 

He said, " Do not be afraid; your father 
shall not go to Africa," and when he said 
that the soldiers struck him with the butts of 
their muskets and drove him down the street. 
He called back to me, but I could not hear 
the words. 

It grew dark, and then the night came, 
and then— it happened. 

It was the night of July 26th — I will never 
forget that date. I was sitting up late won- 
dering why my father did not come. He was 
always home early, but here it was nearly 
midnight and he was not home yet. I did 
not know, of course, that Berriz had had him 
arrested again ; this time secretly. 

The night was beautiful — so still, and calm, 
and peaceful; but there was no peace in my 
heart. 

Several times I decided to retire without 
waiting for my father, but I dreaded to lie 
down until he was in the house. I said my 
prayers, and that quieted me, but even 
prayer could not set my fears at rest. 

Many times I went to the window and 
looked out into the night. Such a night ! It 
is not thus in the North. In Cuba every- 
thing is still as death. The moon is a great 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 167 

piece of gold, and it makes the -whole world 
golden. Here the moon is silver, and at 
night everything is blurred, but in Cuba all 
is bright as day ; the shadows are darker, 
that is all. 

As I looked up the street I saw something 
move out of the shadow of a wall. The moon- 
light touched it and glittering spots appeared 
all over it. It moved nearer, and I saw it 
was a man. The moonlight touched him, 
and there seemed a hundred spots on him 
that gleamed like fireflies. Another moment 
and he was swallowed in the dark shadow of 
another wall, 

I realized what the skulking figure meant. 
It seems to me not strange that there should 
come" to us a warning when misfortune 
threatens. Presentiments had come to me 
before. All that night I had felt there was 
trouble in store for me. How? I cannot tell, 
but when you pray and tell your beads and 
no answer of comfort comes to your mind 
from Heaven you know in your heart that it 
is woe. 

When I was a little girl, a nurse told me 
this was the shadow of the dark angel's wing 
on your soul. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l68 HER OWN STORY. 

You can believe old nurses' stories at such 
times. 

The end of the wall, in the shadow of 
which the figure had vanished, was near to 
our house. Soon the man came into the 
light. 

He was in full uniform. The glitter was 
from the gold lace on his shoulders and cap, 
from the stars on his collar, from the braid on 
his breast, his belt and the hilt of his sword 
and from his spurs. 

He came upon the veranda. 

It was Col. Berriz. He had put on all the 
finery of a colonel, and all his military orders. 

He glanced up and down the street. 

He knocked at my door. 

CHAPTER VI. 

THE RESCUE. 

Foe a moment I did not know what to do. 
I knew there was an officer at the door, but 
I did not know whether he had come to 
arrest me or to tell me of my father. I hes- 
itated to lift the little wooden latch that was 
the only fastening we were allowed to have 
on the house-door, and this was only to keep 
the door from blowing to and fro in the wind. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEI<INA CISNEROS. 169 

There was another knock. I ran to open the 
door, but I was too slow. 

The door flew open. 

Col. Berriz had broken into our house. 

We stood there looking at each other. He 
leaned upon his sword with one hand, and 
with the other trifled with his medals or 
stroked his mustache. 

' ' You're surprised to see me, " he said at 
length. 

"You have come to tell me about my 
father ? " 

"That and some other matters, Evan- 
gelina." 

"Where is my father ? " I asked him. 

" It would have been more courteous to 
ask your visitor to be seated, would it not ? " 
said Col. Berriz. He did not wait for my re- 
ply, but took a chair between me and the 
door. This stopped a plan I had formed to 
dash by him and run into one of the other 
houses of the building. 

Then he began to make love to me. 

I could not answer him ; indeed, I did not 
speak. Presently he ceased talking of love 
and began to talk of my father. 

"You do wrong to quarrel with me, Evan- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



170 HER OWN STORY. 

gelina," he said. "You know that I have 
much power, and if you really wished to 
serve your father and gain his liberty you 
would be kinder to me. There is nothing 
that 1 would not do for you. You have it in 
your power to make your father a free man . 
I never threaten, but if your father should 
be sent to Ceuta or to the Chaferinas you 
would be to blame. You cannot expect to 
have all favors and give nothing in return." 

I begged him to cease molesting me, to 
treat my father as any other prisoner. I 
pleaded with him in the name of his mother 
and his sister to spare me. I prayed to him 
in God's name — then I do not know what I 
said. 

He laughed and said : 

" Do you think I have dressed myself as 
for a princess's ball to come to a sermon by 
a little Cuban rebel ?" 

It was then'>-he caught me by the wrist. He 
said he loved me, and tried to lift my hand 
to his lips, but I released myself. Then he 
became very angry, and did not say that he 
loved me, but told me that it was dangerous 
for me to quarrel with him. 

Then for a moment he was quiet and stern, 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EV ANGELINA CISNBR03. 17I 

and at last he said very softly that he loved 
me better than anything in the world. I did 
not know what to say to him, for I knew he 
was not telling the truth, because no man 
who loves any one would hurt them and 
scold them. No one had ever talked to me 
that way. With my father it was different, 
but when Emilo and I talked together we 
used to speak of Cuba, only of Cuba, and 
how all the misery would be over, were Cuba 
only free. 

Col. Berriz was standing very close to me, 
but I tried to slip past him, for I thought I 
should be braver if even Carmen were with 
me. He caught me by the shoulder and pushed 
me against the wall so roughly that, had I 
not been so frightened, I should have cried 
aloud. 

" Do you know I can make your father a 
free man — with that," and he waved his 
hand, "do you know that if I send him to 
Ceuta or to the Chaferinas, it is your fault — 
yours alone. " 

Then he shook me by the shoulders and all 
the time kept crying out my name, over and 
over again, and saying he loved me — but all 
the time I was afraid 'le would kill me. He 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



172 HER OWN STORY. 

acted as though he were going mad and, I 
remember, I screamed and tore myself away 
from him and rushed toward my own room. 

I had only one thought — to escape! 

When I threw open the door of my room I 
screamed, for Berriz had caught me by the 
arms. 

Then I hardly know what came to pass; 
only it seemed that of a sudden men poured 
in through the outer door, through the little 
window of my room ; there were shouts and 
oaths ; I heard Carmen crying out for me to 
come to her ; I was pushed aside by the crowd 
of men that swarmed out upon Berriz and, 
for a moment, I knew only that I was saved. 

I heard the men shouting and then I heard 
Berriz praying for mercy. Among the men 
was Emilio Betancourt, my betrothed. There 
were many others whom I knew, friends of 
my father and my friends. 

I understand thatthey bound Col. Berriz, 
and that a handkerchief was fastened over 
his mouth to stifle his cries, but this I did 
not see, for I was hiding in my own room. 

I think it would be better to tell the story 
of how I was saved in the words of one of 
my rescuers. Pablo Superville was one of 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 



173 



those who came first to my aid, and he has 
written out for me the story of that night as 
he understood it. I wish to thank him for 
all he has done. 

He writes : 

" I was about to go to bed in my uncle's 
house, near by, when I heard a girl's cry for 
help. I went 
out to go to her 
assistance, and 
when I reached 
the street I 
found that the 
cries, mingled 
with a man's 
threats, to make 
the girl keep 
quiet, were pro- 
c e e d i n g from 
Evangel ina's 
room. I met 
two other young 
men. (Emilio 
Vargas, a friend 
of my cousin, to whom Evangelina was be- 
trothed, saw one of them), who had also 
rushed out in response to the cries for help. 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



174 HER OWN STORY. 

" We went into the room and found Evan- 
gelina struggling against Berriz's efiEorts to 
overpower her. We knew it was Berriz im- 
mediately, for the man in his inordinate con- 
ceit had come out in the full paraphernalia 
of his military rank, perhaps hoping thus to 
dazzle the young girl. 

" His sword dangled by his side, and his 
breast was a mass of military orders and 
decorations, that, together with the gold 
lacings, and straps and buttons of his uni- 
form, made him look as if he had adorned 
himself for dress parade. He is a big, pow- 
erful-looking man, and the mere slip of a girl 
struggling to free herself from his grasp 
made my blood boil, as I needed no one to 
tell me what it all meant. 

' ' Vargas was the first in the room. He 
grabbed Berriz by the shoulders and pulled 
him away from the girl. Vargas almost 
threw him to the floor. Berriz had hardly 
time to be aware of our presence in the room. 
As soon as he felt Vargas' hands on his 
shoulders he let Evangelina go. 

' ' We rushed upon Berriz and bore him to 
the floor. 

' 'The man was so frightened, coward that he 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



BVAMGEWNA CISNB&OS. t7S 

Ib, tliat he hardly made resistance. He tried 
to awe us with his military rank as military 
commander of the island. He ordered us 
out of the house, as military commander, he 
said, and if we did not go we would repent 
it, he added. 

" For his commands we gave him blows, 
but much as we would have liked to beat him 
so that he would carry the marks forever, 
still there was no attempt nor intention to kill 
him. Perhaps we even did not beat him as 
much as he deserved. 

" When we had him on the floor some one 
suggested that we bind his arms and take 
him to the judge, Don Enrique Gonzalez. A 
piece of rope was secured and we proceeded 
to carry out this idea, and tied him securely. 

' ' Berriz offered little or no resistance. 
Perhaps we did not give him a chance to 
draw his sword, but I don't believe he ever 
thought of his sword, so scared was he. 
When he found that he could not frighten us 
with his words he changed his tactics and 
pleaded for mercy. If he had been a child he 
could not have acted more weakly. His 
words, as he begged us to spare him the hu- 
miliation of being turned over, with his arms 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



176 HER OWN STORY. 

bound, to the judge of the place of which he 
was the military commander, were almost 
choked with sobs, and I believe there were 
even tears in his eyes. 

" Then when he found that his pleas for 
mercy were of no avail he began to cry out 
'Murder!' 'Help!' and the like. These 
cries attracted soldiers in the neighborhood, 
and eight or nine of them came rushing into 
the room. They were armed and we were 
not. Moreover, we recognized the futility of 
trying to cope with them ; we had no weapons 
of any kind, so we fled, every one of us get- 
ting away. 

' ' I went back to my uncle's house and 
quickly got into bed. In my room I heard 
shots fired and cries of ' Viva Cuba Libre.' 
The firing and the crying of 'Viva Cuba 
Libre ' were kept up the rest of the night. 
Berriz had told the soldiers to do this, for it 
was the soldiers who cried ' Viva Cuba Libre,' 
to create the impression that there was an 
uprising. 

"If we had wanted to kill Berriz we could 
easily have done so, for he was absolutely in 
our power long enough for us to have dis- 
patched him with his own sword." 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNSROS. l^^ 

Meanwhile I was left alone. I had closed 
the door of my bedroom as soon as I could, 
and sat there trembling while the shoot- 
ing was going on in the rear of the 
house, and the Spanish soldiers were releas- 
ing Berriz in the front room. They did not 
come after me, and for hours I waited in ap- 
prehension. 

I had no doubt that Col. Berriz would seek 
to be revenged upon me. I did not know 
what to do. As far as I knew I was en- 
tirely unguarded, but how to get away from 
the island I could not think. However, I de- 
termined to risk it. I thought any fate was 
preferable to my being captured there. So 
at about three o'clock in the morning I 
slipped out of the door and went back toward 
the hills. I knew of a little cabin up there 
where I thought I might hide until some- 
thing happened or the excitement subsided. 

I was about to enter this cabin when I 
heard voices inside, and looking in at the 
open door from the shelter of a tree I saw 
some soldiers were already there. I hurried 
away further back into the hills. 

Daylight came and I was still alone. I has- 
tened to hide myself. In a little ravine the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



178 HER OWN STQRY. 

rocks came together and formed a natural 
shelter, a little cave out of which a rill of 
water ran. There I hid. 

I tried to drink the water, but found it was 
undrinkable because of some minerals in it. 
Then I realized I could not stay there. Thirst 
and hunger would surely drive me out, even 
if the soldiers did not find me, so I retraced 
my steps, went back to Santa Cruz, entered 
my own house and found my sister Carmen 
half dead with anxiety about me. I was worn 
out, my clothes were stained with mud from 
the soil of the cave. I bathed and dressed 
myself and set about getting breakfast. 

Those exiles who had rushed out the back 
way when the soldiers broke in my house 
door had been recaptured ; I had supposed 
some. of them were killed in the firing; but, 
if they were, no report of their death was 
ever made. 

CHAPTER VII. 

IN PRISON, 

In the morning two soldiers came and 
made me a prisoner. We were not kept 
long at the Isle of Pines. I did not see Ber- 
riz again for many months. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 



179 



Once more we were marched aboard the 
Nuevo Cubano. This time I was as much a 




PRISON RATIONS. 



prisoner as any of them. Carmen, too, 
though she had not known anything about 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l8o HER OWN STORY. 

the events of that night, was a prisoner by 
my side. We steamed out of the little bay 
and to the mainland of Cuba. It was a 
dreary, weary journey this time. Our treat- 
ment was the same as that of the other 
prisoners. We had to eat the rancho that 
was left after the soldiers had made their 
meal. In due time we came to Batabano 
and were again hurried into the cars. There 
was no gentle lieutenant in command of our 
guard this time to give me fresh fruit and 
bid me not despair. The soldiers whenever 
they spoke to us either jeered at our distress 
or insulted us. As before, the train was 
guarded with a traveling fort at each end, 
and a pilot locomotive went ahead to make 
sure that the roadway had not been blown 
up. There were soldiers on every platform 
to fight off the insurgents if the train was 
attacked. 

Our only hope seemed to be that the rebels 
would attack the train and deliver us from 
our guards. Then we would be in Cuba 
Libre, and I found myself dreaming of being 
a nurse with the army of my country, and 
helping make well again the poor Cuban 
soldiers who had been wounded in fighting 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEEOS. 183 

for liberty. I think every prisoner on the 
train felt as we did and hoped as we did. 
But mile after mile passed by and no help 
came. There was nothing to be seen from 
the car windows but palms and tobacco 
plantations and sugar fields, with here and 
there a, little stone fort with its Spanish gar- 
rison. 

At last we reached Havana. My sister and 
myself were put in a carreta and taken to 
Recojidas, the prison for abandoned women 
in Cuba. We had lived among prisoners and 
among soldiers, but we had never met the 
awful creatures who were locked up in that 
jail which was to be my home for fifteen 
months. I knew something about the inside 
of jails, but I had never heard of such a 
place as this. 

We were taken through a barred door and 
examined in the oflace of the warden of the 
jail. They asked me to make a statement 
and questioned me about the events of the 
night when Berriz came to my house. I told 
them nearly all the truth, suppressing only 
the names of my friends, because I did not 
want to get anybody else into trouble. Then 
another door was opened to us, and my sister 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l84 HER OWN STORY. 

and myself found ourselves in a great cage 
with, it seemed to me, hundreds of the most 
terrible women that could be dreamed of. 

I had prepared myself to live in a cell 
alone and to suffer the common fate of a 
prisoner, but I found that even the poor 
grace of privacy was not vouchsafed. My 
home was to be among these women. 

Carmen and I tried to find a corner where 
we would be alone, but they followed us and 
made fun of our terror. Presently they 
pressed closer to us, and a big negress caught 
me and threw me down on the floor. They 
searched me and took away the few small 
things I had retained, but I really had noth- 
ing of value, so that robbery hardly profited 
them. So it was, day after day. But we 
made no answer to the worst things they 
could say to us, and after a while they found 
they were tired of the sport of annoying us 
and then we had intervals of peace. 

Before this we had learned we were not 
the only good women confined in that 
terrible place. There were other women, 
such as Senora Agramonte and Miss Aguilar, 
who were political prisoners, but they, like 
Carmen and myself, were in the same place 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVAXGELINA CISNEROS. 



I8S 



with all these negresses and evil white 
women, who had been taken from the streets 
for committing robbery and murder. As soon 
as Senora Agramonte learned who I was, she 




THE DAILY TASK. 



came to me and tried to comfort me. She 
was even worse treated than I was, but her 
presence there was a great comfort to me. 
Had I been the only respectable woman in 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



l86 HER OWN STORY. 

that prison, Heaven only knows what would 
have become of me, but her words kept ever 
before me the knowledge that there was a 
world outside, where everything was not evi 
and brutal. 

The work of the prison was done by the 
prisoners, and we had to do our part. Like 
the others, I had to scrub the floors and do 
other menial offices, and it seemed to afford 
the rest great delight to see me at the work. 

I would rather be dead and in my grave, 
with the cross at my head and a stone 
at my feet, than to be for one day in that 
place again. It was not the day that 
made me wish to die. In the daytime we 
huddled all together like scared sheep ; the 
negresses, the women who never spoke to 
me, and I. We were in a pen, like a pen for 
wild animals. There were bars in front of 
us, and men used to come in from the street 
and take hold of the bars and lean in and 
look at us. They blew the smoke of their 
cigarettes in the faces of the women huddled 
there, and they laughed and made jokes with 
each other about us. 

The negresses were kind enough to me after 
awhile, but they could not see why I turned 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEKOS. 187 

my back when people came in and looked at 
us; one of them took me by the shoulder one 
day and pulled me around with my face to the 
bars, and said, ' ' Get used to it ; you might 
as well begin now," and then they all 
laughed, and a ragged man held up a little 
boy to look in and see, and the little boy 
laughed and put his hands over his eyes to 
mock me. If I had had a machete there I 
would have killed that woman. Being in 
prison does not make one feel like being 
good. 

But the day I could get through somehow. 
I was angry sometimes, and that helped me 
to live ; but at night, when everything was 
still and I was shut up in that pen, with 
those awful women, something used to rise 
up in my throat and choke me, and I had to 
say my prayers over and over again to keep 
from tearing my throat open. 

I did not know whether my father was dead 
or alive or what was going on outside the 
little pen where I lived. One day the warden 
of the prison came to my cell and showed me 
an American paper. It was the Journal. 
There was a picture of me in it. " You have 
some fine friends," said the warden ; "they 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



i88 



HER OWN STORY. 



will cry when you stand up before the soldiers 
with a bandage over your eyes and the word 
is given to shoot." 

I could not speak. I could not even think. 
At first I was ashamed. I did not know how 




'^ + markY miu (il'uim'cOT/ 
WARD IN THE RECOJIDAS PRISON. 



my picture could be in the paper from far-oflE 
America. 

So it went on for half a year. My sister 
Carmen was only kept in the prison three 
weeks. At the end of that time she was re- 
leased and I did not hear of her again until 
I, too, was free. One by one my other friends 
were set at liberty, but their places were 
taken by other good women, who because 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNSROS. 189 

they were the wives or sisters of rebels were 
locked up there. One si4e of the great room 
in which we were all confined, like cattle in 
a corral, had no wall except the bars. There 
visitors could come and talk to us, and many 
people came to stare at the women as if 
they were animals in a menagerie. 

One day I was told that a gentleman de- 
sired to see me. I went to the bars and 
found there a stranger. He told me he was 
a correspondent of the New York Journal ; 
his name was George Eugene Bryson and 
he explained to me that the paper he repre- 
sented had heard of my case and was en- 
deavoring to have me released. I did not 
know just what was being done, but I found 
that I was being treated with more consider- 
ation. Some time later two ladies called to 
see me. They were the wife and daughter 
of Consul-General Lee of the United States. 

The visit of Mrs. Lee was like the coming 
of an angel. She spoke to me as she might 
to her own daughter. She promised to do 
for me a number of little things, that only a 
woman could do, and that night, when I said 
my prayers, I prayed, too, that all happiness 
might come to the beautiful American lady 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



igo HER OWN STORY. 

who had been so kind. Very soon after that 
there came the greatest piece of good fortune 
that had happened to me since my troubles 
began. I was taken from that awful hall, 
and with the other political prisoners was 
transferred to a cell of our own in another 
part of the prison. Here, at least, we could 
keep clean and be spared the sights and 
sounds of that assembly room, where the 
dreadful women were gathered. My new- 
found friends took care that we should have 
what comforts were permitted. We were al- 
lowed to cook our own food and we had books 
to read. There were many women there 
who could neither read nor write, and I was 
able to do a service for these by attending to 
their correspondence. 

Mr. Bryson came again and again, and told 
me that the American women were trying to 
help me. If the American women, who 
have done so much for a poor, friendless girl, 
could know how my heart leaped when I 
found that they were my friends, I am sure it 
would make them happy. 

Every night, when I lay down to sleep Ihave 
prayed for those women, and we say in Cuba 
that the prayers of the unhappy are always 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 191 

answered. For a lotig time I was much less 
miserable. I fixed a little place in my cell 
where I could wash and dress myself. I made 
of a box, which some one brought me, a little 
table, where I kept my things. I saved all 
the papers my friends brought me, and I cut 
some of the pictures out and put them on the 
walls of my cell. 

I used to make the good coffee in the morn- 
ing, and if any of the women were sick I 
made them a fresh cup of it, so that they 
should feel better. I had a little cup, 
shaped like an egg, only much thicker, 
and a saucer with a crack in it. I had a 
plate and a little steel knife and fork, 
and I also had a tin coffee pot and a little 
alcohol lamp. So you see I was quite a 
housekeeper. 

I used to cut out the paper in little scal- 
lops and make a table cloth of it. One of 
the women had a birthday when I was in 
prison, and I made her a beautiful cup of 
coffee, with two whole lumps of sugar in it. 
She was so happy that the tears rolled down 
her cheeks. She was a little Cuban woman, 
who was arrested for concealing arms for the 
Cubans. I do not know whether she was 




Digitized by Microsoft® 




THE CHAIR. 



HER OWN STORY. 

falsely charged or not. There 
are so many spies in the prison 
and out that even we women did 
not dare to say the thing we 
meant to each other. That was 
one of the worst things about 
the whole prison. I am not over 
it yet — that feeling that I am 
spied upon and watched and the 
people do not believe me and 
that I must not believe them 
when they speak to me. I often think about 
that little Cuban woman now. Coming up on 
the ship I thought of her. She was a strange 
little thing, and she was always talking about 
the trees and the flowers and the sea, and 
wishing she could see them. She was not 
very well, and sometimes at night she would 
jump up and say she was drowning, and then 
she would walk up and down the floor and cry 
and say that if she could only have one breath 
of the clean sea air again she would come 
back to prison and die content. Her husband 
was a fisherman. 

There was a woman in the prison who was 
not quite like other women. She used to 
sing at night, under her breath, with a sort 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEI<INA CISNEROS. I93 

of humming noise, like a great bee, buzzing 
in the room. At first I liked to hear her 
singing, but after a while, when I looked at 
her, I saw that she was rocking to and fro, 
and she had her arms folded across her 
breast, as if she had something in them. 
Once, when I made her a cup of coffee, she 
turned away from me, and I saw her take the 
cup and make as if she was feeding some- 
thing with it. She always laughed when I 
spoke to her about it, but I believe she 
thought she had a baby in her arms. She 
did not have much to say to the other women 
and they made a good deal of fun of her. I 
don't believe she will live very long. 

There was such a queer smell in the 
prison. I cannot tell what it was like, but 
since I have been here I have dreamed of it. 
The first night I was here I dreamed of it, 
and I awoke and I was trembling and crying. 

I did not like any of those women at first, 
and I never could bear to hear them talk ; 
but when I had written the letters for them 
I began to feel a little different. Every one 
of them had some one that she loved and 
prayed for. 

One day they came and told me seriously 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



194 



HBR OWN STORY. 



that I was to be sent to Spain and put in a 
convent for twenty years. They were always 
telling me things ; first that I was to be sent 

to Africa, then 
that I was to be 
led out into the 
square and shot, 
like a spy; then 
that I was to be 
imprisoned for 
life in Cuba ; and 
when they told 
me about Spain 
I thought they 
were telling me 
the truth. The 
man who told me 
laughed ; always 
before that he had 
pretended to pity 
me. I remember 
that I went and 
sat in the corner 
of my cell and 
tried to imagine how I would feel in twenty 
years from now. Thirty-nine years old I 
would be, and I would have white hair and 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



BVANGELINA CISNEROS. IQS 

my face would be full of lines, and I would 
know nothing except how to embroider and 
to say my prayers and to scold. 

So the time passed away. I had been in 
that prison fifteen months. 

No more friends came to see me, because 
General Weyler was angry at what the 
American newspaper had done and because 
the Queen Regent of Spain had cabled him 
about my case in response to the petitions of 
the American ladies and had ordered me to 
be placed incommunicado — that is, I was not 
to be visited nor was I to receive or send 
messages. 

But I had visitors that I did not want to 
see. The Marquis of Cervrera came and 
wanted me to withdraw my accusation against 
Col. Berriz. He threatened me. He wanted 
me to confess that Col. Berriz had come to 
my room that night at my invitation. 

I told him I would die in Recojidas first. 

They told me Mr. Bryson had been sent 
away from Cuba because of what he had 
written for "Cos Journal about me. 

Then everything was dark to me and there 
no longer seemed any hope. How little we 
know what the future has in store for us. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



196 HER OWN STORY. 

CHAPTER VIII. 

THROUGH THE BARS. 

While all seemed so dark and helpless to 
me in my prison, events were shaping to- 
ward my delivery. For weeks a brave, 
strong man had been watching the jail, seek- 
ing some weak spot, trying to find some way 
to rescue me. 

But of this I knew nothing. I had heard 
the name of him who was to be my deliverer, 
because Mr. Bryson had conveyed word to 
me that Mr. Karl Decker was to succeed him 
as correspondent of the New York Journal in 
Havana, and had bade me have every confi- 
dence in him, but I heard nothing of the new 
correspondent after he called at the prison 
and did not even know that he was still in 
Cuba. 

And then New York seemed so far away. 

I had many fantastic dreams in my prison, 
but I never dreamed of liberty coming to me 
from an American newspaper. I could not 
understand why a citizen of your great re- 
public should risk danger and death to save 
an unknown, helpless Cuban girl in a Span- 
ish jail. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNERQS. 



197 



But one afternoon some one slipped a letter 
into my hand. I shall not tell who the "some 
one" was. I have promised not to do it. 
The letter asked me if I could think of any 
way to escape. It said that I had friends 
outside who would help me. From the mo- 
ment I got that letter I became perfectly 
calm and self-possessed. 
I was not afraid or ex- 
cited, or glad or sorry 
any more. I just 
thought and thought and 
thought. My father has 
a sa3dng, ' ' Courage is 
King." I kept saying 
that over and over to 
myself, and then I be- 
gan to draw a plan of 
the prison and of the 
window. 

Then I pretended to 
be studying an English grammar I had; what 
I really was doing was writing this letter that 
I sent out that same afternoon : 

My plan is the ^following : To escape 
by the roof with the aid of a rope, 
descending by the front of the houss at 




SHE RECEIVES A LETTER. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



igS HER OWN STORY. 

a given hour and signal. For this I 
require acid to destroy the bars of the 
windows and opium or morphine so as 
to set to sleep my companions. The 
best way to use it is in sweets, and 
thus I can also set to sleep the vigi- 
lants. 

Three of you come and stand at the 
comers, a lighted cigar will be the 
signal of alarm, for which I may have 
to delay, and a white handkerchief 
will be the agreed signal by which I 
can safely descend. I will only bring 
with me the necessary clothes tied 
around my waist. This is my plan; 
let me know if it is convenient. 

I soon got my answer back from my mys- 
terious friends. They told me to be at the 
window the next night at midnight, but they 
sent me no morphine. 

I had a very bad tooth and it had ached a 
great deal. The doctor of the prison gave me 
laudanum for my tooth. He would not give 
it to me at first, but I cried and moaned and 
walked up and down my cell and begged him 
very hard. So he gave it to me. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 



199 



He said, " Be careful, little one; this laud- 
anum kills people." 

I laughed and said, "Tell me true, doc- 
tor, how much of this would kill a woman 
like me?" 

" Twenty drops," he said. 

So in the afternoon I made coffee, and I 
dropped the laudanum in the coffee. I had 
to do it very quickly for fear some of the 
women would see me, but I was very care- 
ful, for I did not want to hurt any of them. 

When the women had all gone to sleep, I 
put on my dress and I stood at the window 
and waited. The women in the cell all slept 
soundly enough, but the woman who thought 
she held a child in her arms would not lie 
still. She kept turning over and taking long 
breaths, as if she were going to speak. Every 
time she moved 
I turned cold to 
my finger tips. 
Once she sat up 
and looked 
straight at me. 
I think my heart 
stopped beating, 
lay down again. While I stood at the window 




MISS CISNEROS' COT. 



I started to speak and she 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



200 HER OWN STORY. 

I said my prayers, and I counted, and I did 
everything I could to keep myself quiet. 

At last I heard a noise. It sounded like 
some one scratching on a pane of glass. I 
stood quite still and watched. I saw the top 
of a man's head coming up over the roof of 
the house next to the prison ; then I saw the 
man walking on the roof. He looked like the 
shadow of a man. He seemed to come 
toward me with such long, quick steps, 
that I felt as if he were not a real man at all, 
but something I was dreaming. 

He put his hand through the bars and took 
hold of my hand. 

" Don't be frightened," he said, " we will 
soon have you oiit of here. " 

I did not speak one word. The man be- 
gan to saw on the bars. The saw made a 
terrible noise. I do not see how the women 
in the cell could sleep through it. I wrapped 
a sheet round me, so that if any of the women 
in the cell woke up they would not see that I 
was dressed. 

All at once some one coughed. The woman 
who had frightened me before sat up and be- 
gan to talk. 

" My head aches," she said. " I feel as if 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




RESCUER AND RESCUED. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



EVANGSLXNA CISNEROS. 203 

I was choking. Who is that at the win- 
dow ? " 

" I am at the window," I said. " I am sick 
and I came to get a breath of air." The 
men turned at once and ran quickly across 
the roof and disappeared. 

Then I went back to my bed and lay down, 
and in about ten minutes, I think it could not 
have beea longer, I was fast asleep. I do 
not see how I could sleep, but I know that I 
did. In the morning, when I awoke, I was 
so weak that I could scarcely lift my hand. 
All that day I sat in the cell and wondered 
when some one would speak about that bar 
in the window. I do not see how it was 
that no one noticed that it was partly sawed 
through. 

I began to sing a little and to talk, trying 
to get the women to look at me and to keep 
away from the window, but one of them said 
that I must have had good news to make me 
talk so much, and I did not dare to speak 
again. 

That day was a life to me. When night 
came I made coffee again, and again I put 
the laudanum in the coffee. Then I lay down 
in my bed and pretended to go to sleep. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



204 



HER OWN STORY. 



When I made the coffee that night one of 
the women said that she had felt sick all day 
and she did not know what was the matter 
with her, and she be- 
lieved I had bewitched 
the coffee. 

All the women 
laughed at this, and I 
laughed too. Well, 
at last they went to 
sleep, and then I got 
up and put on my dress 
and stood at the win- 
dow again, and counted 
again, and prayed 
again. The moon was 
shining very bright; 
oh! so big and round 
and white ; there were three clouds near the 
moon, and one of them was shaped like a 
mountain, and I played to myself that I 
would climb up that mountain, and I began 
in my mind to walk up the jagged edges 
of the cliffs. 

It was, somehow or other, all like a dream, 
and I was not at all surprised when some one 
spoke my name quite in my ear. A man 




LAUDANUM IN THE COFFEE. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 20S 

Stood on the roof and was looking in at the 
window. He asked me if I were ready, and 
I said I was. Then he began to work on the 
bars of the window. He twisted and turned 
the bar with something which he had in his 
hand. Click! it broke! 

I was perfectly calm until that moment, 
but had I not put my hand over my mouth, 
I should have screamed aloud, when I saw 
the bar break. 

Then the man at the window put his 
shoulder under one end of the bar and he 
pushed with all his strength against it. I 
tried to take hold of the bar and help him, 
but he pushed my hand away, as if he were 
very angry. At last the bar was lifted. The 
man put his arms inside the window and took 
me by the shoulders. 

' ' Don't try to climb," he said, ' ' they would 
hear you." 

So I hung there like a dead woman, and 
the man lifted me out of the window, and I 
stood on the roof, with two bearded men. 
One of them took me by the hand and we 
crept across the roof to the wall. There was 
a ladder, running from the wall to another 
roof. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



2o6 HER OWN STORY. 

One of the men wanted to carry me across 
the ladder — as if I needed that ! I was so 
light I could have flown across. I ran over 
the ladder as surely as if it had been solid 
ground; the men crawled over slowly and 
carefully, and I almost laughed at their awk- 
wardness. 

We climbed down from the roof into the 
patio of a little house and then went into the 
house itself. 

Oh ! it was good to be free. One of the men 
took me by the hand and led me quickly into 
the street. There a carriage was waiting. In 
a moment we were in the carriage and being 
driven away — away to freedom ! I don't think 
any of us spoke. 

When we had ridden quite a little way the 
carriage stopped and the two men took me 
into a house. I do not know whose house it 
was, nor even in what street it was; nor if I 
did know should I tell. There was a room 
ready for me and I went upstairs into the 
room and went to bed. I don't think I 
thanked the men who had brought me there. 
I did not go to sleep all night. Once in a 
while I started to fall into a little doze, but I 
always found myself climbing up the sides 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 20/ 

of the Steep mountain with the round moon 
staring down at me like a sick face. 

In the morning some one brought me food, 
but it was a whole day before I could eat. I 
stayed in that house three days. On the 
morning of the third day the people brought 
me a suit of boy's clothes, and told me I must 
put them on. I was afraid I should have to 
cut my hair. I tried to smooth it down close 
to my head and to put on a big slouch hat, 
but it would not look nice. At last, how- 
ever, I got some pomade and plastered my 
hair down very smooth. Then I cut some 
of it off, so as to leave some short hair to show 
my hat around my face. 

I put on the boy's suit and I walked up and 
down my room and practiced stepping like a 
man. My feet looked very large in the boy's 
shoes, and I could not help trying to hide 
them all the time. I think I laughed a good 
deal when I was practicing to look like a 
man, but it is all so much like a dream to me 
that I can't exactly tell. My suit was blue, 
what you call serge. I wore a butterfly neck- 
tie and a large American slouch hat. 

At 5 o'clock on the third day I left the 
house to go to the steamer. My rescuers 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



208 HER OWN STORY. 

told me to take long steps and not to look 
around, and, most important of all, not to 
recognize them, for they said they would be 
near me all the time until I was safe on the 
steamer. 

All the way across Havana I walked with 
long steps, with a big cigar in my mouth. 
Straightaway through Obisbo street I went, 
the busy street of Havana, where there is 
always a crowd, and the sidewalks are so 
narrow that when two people meet one of 
them must step down into the roadway. 

Every once in a while I would catch a 
glimpse out of the corner of my eye of my 
friends. Mr. Decker was nearest, just half 
a dozen steps behind me, on the other side 
of the street, strolling along with his hands 
in his pockets and his eyes everywhere ex- 
cept on me — ^just like a great boy, without a 
thing in the world to think about, and further 
back were the others, not one of the three 
seeming to know each other or myself. So 
we walked through Havana to the dock. 
There I got into a small boat. 

The boat went up to the Seneea. I sat and 
waited. 

A sailor came to the edge of the steamer 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEUNA CISNEROS. 209 

and said to me in Spanish, "Follow me." I 
followed him. 

There were plenty of police there. The 
Chief of Police stood beside the rail as I 
passed. I puflEed very hard on the cigar and 
made a great cloud of smoke about my face. 
I might have been his grandmother for all 
he could see through the smoke. 

An officer examined my passport. It was 
for Juan Sola, aged eighteen, sailor by pro- 
fession. He passed it without a second 
glance. I followed the sailor to a little cabin 
on deck. He opened the door and told me 
to go in. I went in and crawled under the 
lowest berth and lay there. 

They made up the berth above me, and I 
lay in the dark, like a dead person in a coffin. 
But O, how glad I was to be there ! 

CHAPTER IX. 

UNDER America's flag. 
How long I lay under the berth I do not 
know. It seemed a lifetime. Now and then 
I thought I heard some one coming, and 
shuddered to think of what awaited me if I 
were taken back. I felt a slight motion of 
the boat, but it did not seem that it had 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



210 HER OWN STORY. 

Started. Suddenly I heard the door of my 
stateroom open and some one came in. I 
heard the heavy step of a man moving about 
the room, and knew I was being searched 
for. I felt sure all was lost, but I held 
my breath and pressed close to the wall. 
I heard the man strike a match, and 
then, I "thought, now it is all over.' I made 
up my mind that when I was taken out on 
deck I would jump overboard the first mo- 
ment I could. 

" Evangelina," some one called. 

I did not answer. 

" Miss Cisneros, where are you ? I 

am " (he called out bis name, which for 

his own sake must still be kept secret). 
"Where are you, Evangelina?" he repeated, 

I knew it was a friend, and I crawled out 
from under the berth, and when I looked in 
the laughing face of my friend I began to 
cry. 

"We are from Havana one hour out," he 
said gently, " and nobody can harm you now. 
Come up on deck and see how you like lib- 
erty." 

I tried to think of something to say, but 
how could I ? It seemed too good to be true. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 211 

I simply cried and cried. I did not go out 
on deck, for I was feeling too weak. 
I stayed in the stateroom until the next day, 
and then, having changed the boy's clothes 
for the red dress 
I had worn when 
I came from pris- 
on, left the statC' 
room. 

I went up on 
deck, and the pas 
sengers gathered 
around me, and 
the ladies kissed 
me and the gen. 
tlemen talked to 
me and told me 
what a brave 
girl I was, and 
brought me ice- 
water, a chair and 
a rug, and you 
would have imag 
ined I was the greatest woman in the world. 

But I'm afraid I didn't hear much the pas- 
sengers said to me. I just sat and listened 
to the water rushing past the ship. 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



212 HER OWN STORY. 

Do you know what I thought of most on 
my way to New York? 

I kept continually asking myself what I 
could say to the men who had saved me, that 
would even faintly express my gratitude. 

Every day on the steamer was an epoch in 
my life. One night one of my new-found 
friends pointed out what I thought was a 
star. 

"Do you know what that is?" he said; 
" that is Hatteras light." 

"Then that is America," I said — I could 
say no more. I am not demonstrative or- 
dinarily, but I need not say how much that 
light meant for me. I knelt down there and 
thanked God that a free country was so 
near. 

When we sailed up the beautiful bay to- 
ward New York, I could not look out, I was 
so excited. Finally we stopped and a little 
steamer came alongside the Seneca. There 
on the deck I saw my first friend, Mr. Bry- 
son. All round him were others, with smiles 
on their faces, and I knew from their kind 
eyes that they, too, were friends, though I 
had never seen them before. Then I did a 
very foolish and childish thing. I rushed 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 413 

into my cabin and buried my face in the pil- 
low of my berth and cried, and it was some 
time before I was able to leave the room. 

How I got on the little steamer I do net 
know. The first I remember is that some 
ladies were hugging me, and crying over me, 
and I was hugging them, too, and crying and 
laughing like a girl with hysterics. Then it 
was all confusion again until I found myself 
in a carriage, traveling up a street more won- 
derful than any of which I had ever dreamed. 
I thought the street would never end. As 
far as I could see it still went on between the 
rows of palaces like a canon in fairyland. At 
last we came to the hotel. 

My new friends brought me into beautiful 
rooms and told me to rest and I sat down and 
closed my eyes and tried to think. Every- 
thing had happened so quickly. It was such 
a great change that I almost feared it was a 
dream and I might wake up and see the sky 
through the bars of my prison again. For 
some days I rested, not because I was tired, 
but to please my new friends, who seemed 
to think I was made of thin glass that would 
break if they were not careful. Many people 
came to see me. Some of them were great 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



214 HER OWN STORY. 

men and they brought their wives and 
daughters, and I never could get used to be- 
ing of so much consequence. 

One day I was told that there was a gentle- 
man to see me in the parlor. I went in, and 
there I saw the man whom first I had seen 
through the bars of my prison window on 
the roof of Recojidas. Of course, I started 
to thank him, but the words of gratitude gave 
way to tears. He had come to accompany 
me, he said, to a reception which was to be 
held that evening. When the time came we 
rode together to a large banquet room, where 
I met ever so many people, most of whom, 
I learned afterwards, are great and famous. 
It was like a queen's reception, having so 
many gentlemen of distinction, with their 
wives and daughters, come to one and speak 
with so much kindness and sympathy. I was 
asked to make a little speech, and I did so, 
but I was not able then, and the more I think 
of it, the more I realize, that I shall never be 
able to say what I felt. When it was too 
late, though, I thought of many things I 
ought to have said, and wondered if they all 
thought me very stupid and ungrateful. 

Then we went to Madison Square. Mr. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEI/INA CISNEROS. 215 

Decker and myself were escorted to the plat- 
form by a number of soldiers, sailors and 
policemen, all in uniform. "A guard of 
honor," I thought, "and for me!" I thought 
of things that had happened only a week be- 
fore, and wondered if there could be two per- 
sons with the name of Evangelina Cisneros. 

The people cheered and cheered when we 
came on the platform, and as I looked over 
the great sea of faces, my eyes filled with 
tears, and the only response I could make to 
this great gathering of good people was to 
wave my handkerchief. I think they under- 
stood, though here again I felt more than I 
shall ever be able to express. 

Then came the music, the beautiful patriotic 
airs of free Cuba, and all the while the sky 
was ablaze with fireworks. You know, when 
I was not thinking how much I myself owed 
to the American people, I seemed to see 
through all the cheering and the music and 
the brilliant lights, the real, the grand future 
of Cuba. With so many friends before me, 
I could wish but one thing, and that was 
that the brave men at home might be present, 
if but for a moment, to hear the American 
people cheer. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



2l6 



HER OWN STORY. 



After the speechmaking by the Senators 
and Congressmen, Mr. Decker took me by 
the hand, and we stood up and bowed while 
the people cheered and cheered until I 
thought they never would cease. Years and 




years from now, if I live, I will hear and see 
those people, as distinctly as I do at the 
present moment. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGKWNA CISNEROS. 217 

Soon after this— I think it was about a 
week later — I went to Washington. I had 
not thought it possible that there could be 
another city in which so many people would 
show as much kindness as the New Yorkers, 
but in the Capital City I learned again that 
the sympathy of the American people does 
not end with a mere word. There was an- 
other great reception to my rescuer and my- 
self ; there was more music, more cheering 
and another procession in our honor. When 
I learned that this was Mr. Decker's old 
home the cheering crowds had a new interest 
for me ; they had known this man whose 
coming had meant so much to me ; they had 
known him years and years ago, I thought ; 
they are well able to cheer him. 

The meeting in the great hall was such a 
meeting as I would wish to see in Cuba. 
I should like to see so many people cheering 
Cuba's flag at a great gathering on Cuba's 
own soil. It would mean that the reign of 
wrong had ended. It would mean that the 
Cuban patriot would not need to tremble for 
his home, his wife and daughter. 

I was introduced to Corporal Tanner, and 
when the cheering had partly ceased he 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



2l8 HER OWN STORY. 

made a speech in which he spoke frequently 
of Cuba, Mr. Decker and myself. I could 
not understand what he said, but I under- 
stood the hearts of the people about us when 
they would rise up, as they did every few 
minutes, and cheer at something Mr. Tanner 
had said. 

When Mr. Decker stood up to speak I had 
a friend translate for me his words. 

"Ladies and Gentlemen," he said, "I wish 
to introduce Miss Cisneros. Ex-Secretary 
Carlisle says Spain can have her. All I have 
to say is, let Spain send and get her !" 

For the first time the great cheering al- 
most made me timid. I bowed to the peo- 
ple and thought how much I would like to 
say, but how little all I could say would ex- 
press my feelings. 

I shall always remember the greatness and 
goodness of the American heart, for here at 
these meetings they expressed together what 
had come to me first by a single act and a 
single voice. 

One morning I was told that I was to see 
President McKinley. To me this was the 
climax. •• Now," I thought, " Now I can do 
something for my country. Perhaps my 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




AT THE RECEPTION. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 221 

great good fortune will not end with myself, 
but will extend to my fellow-countrymen. " 

I thought over what I would say to the 
President. Up to the moment of departure 
I kept repeating to myself a plea for my 
country: 

" I come to speak to you," I determined 
to say, "for the women and children of 
Cuba, who are helpless. The men, they 
speak for themselves in the field — but the 
women — the children — who are the victims 
of murder and outrage, must look to the 
great civilized Government of the United 
States for protection. They ask you to see 
that wholesale murder shall not any longer 
be committed by the Spanish troops, and 
that those who are unable to defend them- 
selves against barbarity shall find a defender 
in the Government of the United States. 
The mothers and daughters of Cuba ask you 
on their knees to save them from further out- 
rage. One word, one stroke of your pen 
means freedom and happiness for them. You 
cannot, ah, you cannot forget the history of 
your own country. If you recognize the 
belligerency of the Cuban Republic our 
fathers and brothers will no longer be called 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



222 



HER OWN STORY, 



outlaws on the land and pirates on the sea. 
The women of Cuba will bless you for it. 
God will bless you and your country for it. " 




It was Mrs. John A. Logan, the widow of 
the great General, who was to present me. 

When I was driving with her to the White 
House, she said : 

"You are trembling." 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGELINA CISNEROS. 223 

"Yes, madam," I confessed, "I tremble 
more than when I helped Mr. Decker to 
break through the bars of the Recojidas; 
more than when I gave laudanum to my fel- 
low-prisoners ; more than when I crossed the 
ladder that bore me to safety; more even 
than when in boy's clothes I walked through 
the streets of Havana. There is more than 
one life at stake." 

We drove into the beautiful grounds about 
the White House, and tremblingly I entered 
the residence of the great governor of this 
wonderful land of brave people. As we 
stood in the waiting-room the door opened 
and an usher called: 

"The President!" 

Then he came in. I looked into his kind, 
gentle face, and I felt no more fear. 

Mrs. Logan took my hand. 

"This, Mr. President," she said, "is 
Evangelina Cisneros. " 

I stood face to face with the President of 
the United States. I, the prisoner of Reco- 
jidas, and I could not say a word. My poor 
speech for Cuba was forgotten ; but I looked 
into the kind face of the President and what 
I thought I saw there made me content. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



V&ite^ ©tet-fe©® ©* iliE&@rieiu 



StXtB or New Yoiik.' 

CiTV AND CQVNTV op New YoRK, 




I3e itl^mffnltTtiif That vo ^^J/AlM^>kTA/^vf G 
Id t!ie ye^^^oi^ Lord one tSmirsand eight^ndred anJ'mnety/^KjRlft^^rfrsonally 

In the 51/itreme Co^f 0//^ 5tofe of2TewTorkix'iflrstj3udieial3H8tri(it 

(said Court being a Court of'HecorS/havwtg common"7aw furUiidton. a Clerk and a Seai\ 
And mads hie Declaration of Intention to become Ji Citizen of the U^iited States ol 
^ds following, to witT 



was wuowing, to witr . 




do declare on oath, thjj^is bmajide my Intention lo becom^VCitlzen of the UnJUfl 
8tat£S of America, and to renounce forev^. all allegiance and fidelity to ^^fofeiin 

-prince.. Poten^e, Staitc or Sovereignty, whatever, ^d particularly to the SSt^o^oT 

L4i^g3ei:3«^>./.— ^>^— ■■— -^f whbm I am nj 

^arrived Jolh^ United States on the: vJL.0&J J^:..Av^ ^l. 




(and that' 



^&i^f:s^mJmghM&s^^^ 



ir.T.diVt 




Xu 4fl(c»Uitloil 1Vb6Teoi;''an7t&tt*tB«-forfiepIne.1^ ^'trbe'cepy of thf 
original Declaration of InteAtton reiTlaialog of .record [n my -office, I| 
HzttRV D^URROY, aCIcrfc of ..(he said Court, have hereunto-^ 
lubscriboI^^R^nAnd^xed the>seM of the'said Courts tbis^jCW * 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



EVANGEWNA CISNEROS. 225 

And now lam in America, 

On the fifteenth of October, iSgj, I made applica- 
tion to the courts that my name might be enrolled 
as a citi2en of this great, free country, and I have 
received my first papers of naturalization. There 
is nothing I can say that will in any way express 
the great love I have for the American flag — the 
flag under which I found freedom and safety. 

My father is still in prison. He has not yet been 
deported to Spain. Now that General Weyler has 
been removed I have not lost all hope that he may 
yet be saved — if not to-day, yet in that great day 
when Cuba shall bejree. Of the other friefids in 
the Isle of Pines I dare not speak. Even to mention 
their names might bring trouble upon them. And 
of my sister Carmen, all I dare say is that she has 
been taken care of by friends of ours in Cuba. We 
shall meet, little sister, when Cuba is free! 

Over me is the protection of the dear American 
flag. I may thank all my friends — the faithful 
women of America and the brave men they sent to 
rescue me. I thank them from my heart. 

And now let me write the last word— VIVA 
CUBA LIBRE! 



•&M 



J^a^Y^^^ ^*^^ ^^-^ 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



CUBAN HISTORY 
THE WARS rOR FREEDOM 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 




SHORT summary of the 
more important events 
in Cuban history can 
hardly come amiss, even 
to those who are tolera- 
bly familiar with the stir- 
ring events of the last 
few years. 

^^The Cuban Question " 
is a phrase that has been 
THOMAS ESTRADA PALMA. OH the tip of the toHgues 
of hundreds of thousands of citizens of these 
United States ever since that eventful 24.th 
of February, j8g$, when the present effort of 
Cuba to throw off the misrule of Spain in the 
island began. 

In a general way, every well-informed per- 
son knows that the cause of this latest revolt 
of the Cubans was the intolerable tyranny and 
injustice exercised by the mother country in 
the government of this rich and patient colony. 
Few, however, are in possession of the detailed 
facts which history records, of the centuries- 
long oppression that has been the lot of the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



230 *HE aiSYORV 

unfortunate colonists. It is for the purpose 
of furnishing this information, in concise and 
accurate form, that the following outline has 
been prepared. The story is confined to a 
recital of events, and these are of such a nature 
that they are a complete answer to the query, 
" What brought about the revolt now in 
existence f " 

CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS. 

Cuba was discovered by Columbus in 
1492, October 28, and recording this in his 
diary, the navigator writes : "This, is the 
most beautiful land ever beheld by human 
eyes. ' ' 

The "land" is shaped like an irregular 
crescent and its greatest length is 730 miles. 
Its total area is about 47,000 square miles, 
or a little larger than the combined area of 
Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hamp- 
shire, Vermont, New Jersey, Delaware and 
Maryland. 

Compared with the countries of the Old 
World, Cuba is three times as large as 
Switzerland, more than one-third larger 
than Ireland, about one-third larger than 
the kingdom of Portugal, and four-fifths as 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF CUBA. 



231 



large as England. Its population is about i,- 
631,000, comprising white Cubans, 950,000; 
colored Cubans, 500,- 
000 ; and Spaniards 
160,000. The coast- 
line of Cuba is 2,200 
miles in length; and 
its harbors, including 
sheltered landings, 
number 200. This ex- 
traordinary physical 
configuration of the 
country plays an im- 
portant part in its 
commercial life, the 
export trade of the 
island amounting at 
times to as much as 
$83,000,000 annually. 
The interior iswatered 
by 200 rivers and in- 
numerable small 
streams. The largest 
river is the Cauto, 150 
miles in length, and 
navigable by small vessels for fifty miles 
of its course. 




'T'tldli'ti'iCt'y^^jf^^ 



CUBAN LOOK-OUT. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



232 THE HISTORY 

The principal products are sugar, tobacco, 
coffee, cocoa, bananas, cocoanuts, wax, cedar, 
mahogany and other woods. 

EARLY HISTORY. 

In 1511 an expedition was organized in 
San Domingo, numbering 300 men, among 
them Hernando Cortes, the future conqueror 
of Mexico, and the famous Father Las Casas. 
Diego Velasquez was the commander, and 
his object was to subjugate the island of 
Cuba, which was, at this time, a place of re- 
fuge for a large number of natives who had 
fled from San Domingo to avoid the harsh 
treatment they experienced at the hands of 
the Spaniards. 

Hatuey, a native chief, was one of those 
emigrants, and on learning that the Span- 
iards had landed in Cuba he marshaled his 
warriors to oppose them. The struggle, 
however, was too unequal. The arrows of 
the Indians, pointed with fish-bones, and 
their clubs with heat-hardened ends, were 
no match for the swords, cavalry, cross-bows 
and fire-arms of the invaders. Hatuey was 
defeated, captured and condemned to be 
burnt at the stake. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



OP CUBA. 



235 



His dying words were, "If the Spaniards 
go to heaven, then let me go to hell." 

Velasquez, after he had made his conquest 
complete, parceled out the land to his Span- 
ish followers and allowed 
them a certain number of 
natives to till it. These 
natives were ' ' free ' ' ; but 
in name only. Their 
condition differed, in 
no material way from 
the natives, 
captured i n 
war, who were 
frankly called 
"slaves" and 
openly sold in 
the market. 
This was the 
beginning of 
slavery in the 
island. There 
was a third 
class of na- 
tives. These were the 
free by paying in gold 
for the privilege. 




A TROCHA FORT. 

men who remained 
a heavy annual tax 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



236 THE HISTORY 

THE RULE OF SPAIN. 

Years passed and this state of affairs re- 
mained unchanged by the mother country, 
nor was any effort made by Spain to elevate 
the people of Cuba from the dense ignorance 
in which they lived or to lessen their bur- 
dens of taxation. The world beyond their 
sea-bound home was a closed book to the in- 
habitants of Cuba, save for the unpleasant 
knowledge, brought by pirate raids, which 
laid waste their fields and coast-towns, and, 
on one occasion, captured and pillaged even 
Havana itself. Careless of the mental and 
moral welfare of the Cubans, Spain neg- 
lected to afford them even physical protec- 
tion against their foes. Moreover, if in 
spite of these drawbacks, individual effort 
showed intelligent results, the Spanish Gov- 
ernment, instead of encouraging the pro- 
moters, saw in success only an opportunity 
for heavier taxation. 

This was particularly true of the culture 
of tobacco. As soon as this commodity 
showed its excellence and value under the 
cultivation of the Cubans, a tax was laid on 
it when growing, another when manufac- 
tured and a third when sold ; and so exces- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



OF CUBA. 



237 



sive were these extortions that on many oc- 
casions the planters destroyed their crops 
rather than submit to the avarice of the 
government, 

A NEW ERA. 

The year 1763 opened a new era and pre- 




pared the way for many coming changes, for 
in that year Havana was captured by the 
English and held by them for eleven mon ths. 
During this period the port of Havana was 
open to foreign trade and for the first time 
the Cubans were made aware of the advan- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



238 THE HISTORY 

tages to be derived from such a policy. This 
epoch was the beginning of the unrest that 
has ever since pervaded the island like an 
atmosphere. 

The Spaniards finally regained possession 
of the city and then there was a return to 
the old system, but the change had been 
worked and no amount of force or coercive 
legislation could undo it. 

The opening of worlds beyond their own 
created a desire for edxication, and as Spain 
had provided no adequate institutions of 
learning in the colony the youths of wealthy 
families were sent to the United States and 
to France. In such numbers did they come 
and so eager were they in pursuit of knowl- 
edge that Spain deemed it dangerous to her 
interests, which were dependent on con- 
tinued ignorance, and so in 1799 a Royal 
Decree was issued urging parents to dis- 
continue this practice, which was likely to 
result in harm to them and their sons. 

In 1828 the Royal Decree became more 
peremptory. The practice was prohibited. 
Parents who disobeyed were to be punished ; 
all Cuban students in the United States 
were to return to their homes, and those who 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF CUBA. 239 

had already returned, after completing their 
education , were to be kept under the eye of 
the police and their utterances and conduct 
carefully noted and reported. 

The attitude of Spain in this matter may 
be taken as typical of her treatment of this 
colony in all the relations she has sustained 
towards it. The result has been that since 
the beginning of this century history records 
an almost uninterrupted series of uprisings 
and revolts, of which the present is the latest 
and most desperately fought. 

THE EARLY REBELLIONS. 

The earliest rebellion of the century was 
in 1823. It had its origin, as our own revo- 
lution did, in the resistance to taxation 
without representation, and it was brought 
about in this way : 

Napoleon invaded Spain in 1808 and the 
King of Spain and the royal family were 
taken to France and detained as prisoners of 
war. During the absence of the King a 
national Junta (committee) was formed to 
defend the country. In 18 10 a decree was 
issued by this Junta concerning the National 
Cortes (Parliament), and by the decree the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



240 



THE HISTORY 



inhabitants of the Spanish colonies of 
America were not only authorized to elect 
deputies to represent them, but they were 
directed so to do. Acting in accordance with 
this mandate, Cuba sent 
two deputies. In 1812 
a constitution was 
adopted by the National 
Cortes, thus assembled 
and composed, and the 
first article contained 
the declaration that: 

Inasmuch as the Span- 
ish nation is composed 
of all the Spaniards of 
1^^" both hemispheres, there- 
fore inhabitants of all 
Spanish colonies are en- 
titled to representation 
in the Cortes of Spam. 

Two years later Fer- 
dinand VII. became 
monarch and he abol- 
ished this constitution 
and the rights it gave. Then followed a 
struggle of six years, at the end of which the 
constitutional party triumphed and Cuba 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



OF CUBA. 241 

was allowed representation, this time by four 
deputies instead of two. In 1823, however, 
the constitution was again set aside by the 
King, and Cuba, wearied with such trifling 
with her rights, rose in revolt. The in- 
famous decree investing the Governor of 
Cuba (Captain-General) with the despotic 
powers which are described further on was 
issued by Ferdinand in 1825, and this was 
followed by an uprising in 1826 and another 
in 1828, when the tyrannical edict against 
education aggravated the other and more 
serious questions. In 1830 there was still 
another attempt to regain the rights granted 
under the constitution. 

SPECIAL LAWS. 

In 1833 Ferdinand died. This event 
was seized upon as the opportunity for 
framing a new and different constitution, 
which was adopted, but abandoned three 
years later for the original draft of 181 2. 
By the provisions of this document Cuba 
was entitled to four deputies. Accordingly 
in the beginning of 1837 Cuba's representa- 
tives arrived at Madrid, but their certificates, 
upon presentation, were refused. A protest 
followed and the matter was referred to a 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



242 THE HISTORY 

committee, which reported that it had care- 
fully considered the matter and recom- 
mended that "in future the American and 
Asiatic provinces he governed by special 
laws and that their deputies be not admitted 
to the Cortes. ' ' This report was adopted 
and acted upon and Cuba was left without 
representation. 

The reason for this arbitrary action was 
not hard to discover. Cuba was peopled at 
this time by two classes of whites — Cubans 
and resident Spaniards. The Government, 
having an eye to valuable monopolies, which 
it shared with individuals of Spanish birth, 
guarded jealously the interests of the 
Spaniards, thus insuring their allegiance, 
and on the other hand it degraded the white 
Cubans to the position of a conquered 
people. It was, in other words, detrimental 
to monopolistic enterprises, both govern- 
mental and private, to have Cuban represen- 
tation in the Cortes, and therefore the 
deputies were excluded. Moreover, Gen. 
Tacon was then Captain-General of the isl- 
and and his reports to Spain urged upon 
the people there the absolute necessity of 
military rule in Cuba and repeatedly de- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



OF CTJBA. 



243 



clared that under no other form of govern- 
ment could the country be saved for Spain 
and for the governmental monopolists. 

Cuha was at this time paying vast tribute 
to Spain and it was sorely needed. Indeed 
the Minister of Finance, in a speech to the 




Cortes on the subject of the exclusion of the 
Cuban deputies, openly warned the members 
not to change the prevailing conditions and 
so "endanger the considerable contribu- 
tions" with which the "wants of the mother 
country were relieved." 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



244 THE HISTORY 

THE ROYAL DECREE. 

With no representation in the national 
council of the nation of which it had been 
assured it formed a part,how did Spain pro- 
pose to govern Cuba ? And had the Cubans 
any real cause to complain of the lack of 
representatives ? 

The answer to these questions is to be 
found in the Royal Decree dated March 28, 
1825. This old law, still in force, still un- 
changed, has been one of the most potent 
factors in bringing on the present war. 

This decree confers upon the ruler of Cuba 
(the Captain-General) explicitly and in 
these words "all the powers which by the 
royal ordinances are granted to the gov- 
ernors of besieged cities. ' ' 

Now, be it understood, no such despotic 
power as that vested in the Captain-General 
of Cuba is held by any potentate on earth 
except the monarchs of Eastern despotisms. 
By its provisions the Captain-General is 
superior to the sovereign himself ; he may 
disregard or set aside any law made by the 
King. By the will of the Captain-General 
and at his command persons have been im- 
prisoned without trial, banished, deported to 



Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



OF CUBA. 



247 



penal colonies, their 
estates confiscated 
and their families 
reduced to destitu 
tion. 

In this gross des- 
potism lies the ex- 
planation of the re- 
volts of 1848, 1850, 
1851, 185s and the 
ten years' war of 
1868-78 and indi 
rectly of the present 
rebellion. 

Three years prior 
to the ten years' war the indications of com- 
ing trouble in Cuba were so unmistakable 
that Spain directed an election at which six- 
teen commissioners were to be chosen to pre- 
sent the case of Cuba to the home Govern- 
ment and to suggest reforms. The commis- 
sion was elected and made its report, but its 
recommendations were completely ignored, 
and by way of answer, taxes were increased 
and the collections enforced with unusual 
severity. 

It was a gage of battle. The Cubans did 




Digitized by Microsoft® 



248 



THE HISTOKY 




not hesitate. Annies 
sprang up all over ttie 
island. 

For ten years the con- 
test raged and its cost 
to Cuba was 45,000 lives 
and $1,000,000,000 (one 
billion) in money. 
Spain sacrificed over 
200,000 lives, but laid 
the expenses of the war 
on Cuba. In the course 
of this conflict 13,000 
estates were confis- 
cated, many of them belonging to helpless 
women, whose only crime consisted in the 
fact that they were related to or sympathized 
with the insurgents. 

In five years 2,927 political prisoners were 
executed by the Spaniards. In a period of 
less than four years 4,762 persons were cap- 
tured by the Spanish and have never been 
heard of since. What became of them? 
Dare Spain answer ? 

The struggle was brought to a close by 
General Martinez Campos, who assured the 
Cubans that Spain would grant to them self- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



Olf CUBA. 



249 



government and allow them to send deputies 
to the Cortes. The electoral law, however, 
was so framed that at no time have they 
been able to send more than six and some- 
times only three representatives to Madrid, 
where the Cortes is composed of 430 mem- 
bers — not one against sixty ! 

THE PRESENT WAR. 

Of course with such a majority against 
them little could be done to obtain any rea- 
sonable scheme of government for Cuba, but 




WHERE MACEO FELL. 



finally after sixteen years of ceaseless agita- 
tion of the question a proposition was sub- 
mitted by Minister Abarzuza and approved 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



250 THE/ HISTORY 

by the Spanish Government. These were 
its provisions, and it was in revolt against 
their manifest injustice that the present war 
was begun. 

There was to be a Council of Administra- 
tion, composed of thirty members — fifteen 
elected by the people and fifteen chosen by 
the Government. The Captain-General was 
President, and in addition to the veto he 
was invested with authority to suspend any 
number of members of the Council, " not 
exceeding a majority " sc^i^ iox " any length 
of time. ' ' 

Now by the peculiar conditions of the 
electoral law laid down for Cuba, the Cubans, 
who number more than 1,400,000, would 
have had two representatives, and the Span- 
ish residents, who number only 160,000, 
would have had the other twenty-eight. 

But even with this generous working ma- 
jority and the veto and suspension powers 
of the Captain-General, Spain reserved to 
herself the right to declare all legislation 
ineffective unless approved by the Cortes. 

This was the "self-government" offered 
to Cuba. 

The crowning insult and unbearable op- 



Dlgltlzed by Microsoft® 



OP CUBA. 



251 



pression lay in the manner in which this 
"self-government" was to lure Cuba into a 
trap in which she would have to sacrifice 
$300,000,000, or apparently besmirch her na- 
tional honor. 




THE TROCHA NEAR ARTEMISE. 

Spain had in Europe $200,000,000 of bonds 
called "Cuban" because (although part of 
her national debt) the interest on them is 
paid by the revenues of Cuba. 

A loan of $300,000,000 was contemplated 
by Spain to redeem these bonds and leave 
enough to put a little cash into a very empty 
treasury. Now the proposition was to sub- 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



252 THE HISTORY 

mit this plan to the Cuban Council of Ad- 
ministration for approval. This it will be 
seen was not difficult to obtain by reason of 
the curious regulations governing that body. 
And when this result was reached, if Cuba 
ever became independent, she would be re- 
sponsible for this tremendous debt foisted 
upon her by political juggling. 

This state of affairs confronted the Cubans 
when they began the present war. 

It is not within the purpose of this article 
to describe the confused events of the last 
two years of Cuba. There has been con- 
tinuous fighting and the insurgents, as they 
are called, have won many difficult battles. 
Spain has used against them the usual 
weapons of tyranny — confiscation, starva- 
tion, the hangman's rope, the bribe, torture 
of women and children. And still the 
patriots fight on — poorly equipped, poorly 
fed, they have held their own against the 
best Spanish troops. 

They are led by many of the veterans of 
the famous Ten Years' War. The old, gray 
hero Gomez is in command of the field 
forces — a scattered army of 30,000 men, in- 
cluding the 2,000 veteran insurgents in the 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



OP CUBA 253 

province of Pinar del Rio. Maceo, that 
brave mulatto — as fine a general as the great 
Toussaint, who fought the Spaniards a hun- 
dred years earlier — was treacherously slain 
in a skirmish. 

But the end is not yet. 

The Cuban patriots have been offered a 
mockery of "Home Rule" — in place of 
liberty; they have refused. They have 
demanded absolute freedom from the Span- 
ish yoke ; and in the open field they back 
their demand with the unanswerable logic 
of war. They have friends in this countrj'. 
The Cuban Junta, of which Thomas Estrada 
Palma is chief, has done much to furnish 
the sinews of the war. The sympathy of 
every liberty-loving American is with those 
brave and desperate patriots who are fight- 
ing — not hopelessly — for Cuba Libre. 

And the end is not yet. 




Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



CHRONOLOGY OF CUBAN EVENTS. 

Discovered by Columbus 1492 

Conquered by Diego Velasquez (Spaniard). ..1511-12 

Havana Settled by the Spanish 1519 

" Laws of the Indies" (Thirty-nine Ordinances 
for the Grovernment of the Spanish Colonies) 

signed by Charles 1 1542 

Morro Castle, built by Don Juan de Tefeda, 

First Captain-General (about) 1590 

English Make a Settlement 1741 

Havana Taken by the English and Held Eleven 

Months 1762 

First Anti-Educational Decree 1799 

Decree of Spanish Junta Authorizing Cuban 

Deputies in National Cortes 1810 

Constitution Adopted Recognizing Right of 
Spanish Colonies to Representation in Na- 
tional Cortes 1812 

Ferdinand VII. Crowned and Constitution of 

1 8 12 Annulled by His Decree 1814 

Cuba Opened to the Trade of the World 1818 

Constitution of 1812 Re-adopted by Ferdinand 

VII 1820 

Constitution of 1812 Abolished for Second Time 

by Ferdinand and First Cuban Revolt 1823 

Decree Bestowing Absolute Authority on Cap- 
tain-General 1825 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



256 CHRONOLOGY OP 

Second Cuban Revolt 1826 

Prohibitory Educational Decree and Third 

(Black Eagle) Cuban Revolt 1828 

Fourth (Soles de Bolivar) Cuban Revolt 1830 

Death of Ferdinand VII. and Adoption of a 

New Constitution 1833 

New Constitution Abolished and Constitution 

of 1812 Revived 1836 

Cuban Delegates, Legally Elected, Refused 

Admission to the National Cortes 1837 

"Lone Star" Society Formed 1848 

Fifth Cuban Revolt, Led by Narciso Lopez 1848 

Sixth " •' " " " 1850 

Seventh " " " " •• 1851 

Death of General Lopez 1851 

Eighth Cuban Revolt 1855 

Cuban Commissioners, Sixteen in Number, Di- 
rected to Report to Home Government on 

Condition of the Island 1865 

Report of Commissioners Made 1866 

Report of Commissioners Ignored and Taxes 

Increased by Spain 1867 

Beginning of the Ten Years' War 1868 

United States Government Decides Not to Rec- 
ognize the Cubans as Belligerents 1870 

Rascones Defeats the Marquis Santa Lucia 1874 

A Cuban League Formed in the United States. 1877 

End of the Ten Years' War 1878 

Ninth Revolt (Calixto Garcia) 1870 

Agueno Calls on the Cubans to Revolt 1883 

Unsuccessful American Filibustering Expedi- 
tion 1884 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



CUBAN EVENTS. 



257 



Tenth Revolt (Gomez, Maceo, Crombet) 1885 

Legal Slavery Abolished by the Queen's Decree. 1886 
Gov. -Gen, Salamanca Dies; Succeeded by Gen. 

Rodrig^uez Arias 1890 

Junta Central Issues a Manifesto of Warning to 

Spain 1892 

Cuban Independence Declared 1895 




Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 




Digitized by Microsoft® 




Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



...SOME PUBLICATIONS OF... 

CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING 

25 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK. 



CO. 



Lo-To-Kah. A Collection of Indian 
Stories. Vbbnsb Z. Sibd. Beautifully 
illustrated by L. Maynard Dixon and 
diaries Craig. IZmo, cloth, $1.00. 
"A book in wliioh one can become so in- 
terested as to be utterly oblivious to all 
surroundings."— JV««) Haven Leader. 

Tales of the Sun-Land. VbhnebZ. 

Hked. so full page illustrations by L. 

Haynard Bison. 870, cloth, $1.SS. 

Bight distinct Indian stories. Filled 
^th wild adventures, accounts o£ love- 
making, wars, and superstitions. 

** This man will take his place in Ameri- 
can letters."— Vahcb Thompson, in Mter- 
ary Revieuo. 

Drumsticks. Kathbkihib Mart 
Chbevbb Msrbbith (Johanna Statts), 
"The Story of a Sinner and a Child." 
12nio, cloth, $1.00. 

"The conception of the tale is melo- 
dramatic, with a good deal of what is 
called ■ passion ' in it, in a literary way." — 
SiiOCE, In New York Life. 

Francis Framed in Florentine. 

Hbnby RassELL Wrat. Drawings by 

Vernon Howe Bailey. A series of Pas. 

tels. 13mo, cloth, handsome design,$1.00. 

"A most dainty little volume which will 
appeal strongly to persons of poetic and 
Ideal temperaments into whose hands it 
vay taM.,"— Telegraph, Philadelphia- 
Memoirs of a Little Girl. Wiui- 

I'BED JoHNEs. Interests young and old 

alike. 16mo, cloth, 75 cents. 

" Delightf utly bright and refreshing. 
The autnor does for girl-life what Mark 
Twain did for boy-life in 'Tom Sawyer.'" 
—Oyirrene Literature. 

A Society Woman on Two Con- 
tinents. Countess Spottiswood 
Hackih. 3rd edition. 8to. cloth, $1.50. 
"Her pages fairly dazzle one. . . .She 
makes the manners and customs of Eu- 
ropeans far more intelUgible to us than 
half a dozen books of travel." — Catholic 
Observer. 

Boss. Odette Ttlbb. ISmo, clotli, 

$1.00. 

" Every page is redolent with the pict- 
uresque South, and everjr incident and 
character is portrayed vrith a skill and 
■vigor too often missing in more preten- 
tious works of &atlon."— Herald, N. Y. 



Women Who Laugh. Ella X 
PowBLii. 16mo, cloth, 75 cents. 
"... Full of thought and feelins 
Portrays with faithful hand the ambitioni 
the foibles, and the passions, both goo 
and evil, that make or mar the course c 
We."— Citizen, Brooklyn. 

Missing ; a Tale of the SarsasS' 
Sea. Junes Chahbebs. 8vo, olotl 
75 cents. 

" What Eider Haggard has done tor Zi 
Inland and Anthony Hope for the myth 
cal kingdom of Zenda, Julius Chambei 
does for that vast unexplored region 1 
the Mid-Atlantic known as the Sargass 
Sea. It commands attention from star 
to Ssush."— Current Literature. 

Football and Love. Bubr W. M( 
Intosh. Illustrated by B. West Cline 
dinst; numerous decorative designs h 
Will Phillip Hooper. Japanese pape 
cover in colors, 50 cents. 
■'A graceful little story of the Tale 
Princeton game of '94."— Vance Thomi 
SON, ixiN. Y Commercial Advertiser. 

Vondel's Lucifer. Leonard Chabls 
VAN NoppEN, translator. Handsomel 
bound. Illustrated by the Dutch artist 
John Aarts. Double cover, cloth, ar 
edition, limited, $5.00. 
A metrical translation of this master 

piece of the sublime Vondel, the greates 

of the poets of Holland. 

Through the Invisible. Paul Ty 
NEB. Illustrated by Ella F. Pell. 16mo 
cloth, 75 cents. 
The story is one of love in springtime- 

strangely dramatic, yet entirely natural 

Free Banking; a Natural Right 

Jaubs a. 3. DiLWOBiH. 12aio, cloth 

$1.00. 

This book proposes monetary method: 
fouded on the golden rule— Just to all anc 
unjust to none. 

Cheiro's Language of the Hand, 

Sixth edition. Koyal 8vo, $2.50. 

A complete practical work on the sciencf 
of cheirognomy and cheiromancy, con 
taining the system, rules and experiencf 
of Cheiro the Palmist. Forty full-page 
illustrations, and over two hundred eu 
gravlugs, lines, mounts, and marks. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



SOME PUBLICA TIONS OF CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING CO,— Continued. 



Aladdin tlie Second. Theo. C. 

Knauff. Illustrated. 279 pages, i2mo, 

cloth, $1.00. 

"A really Hvely boy's book ; a kind of 
compound of 'llie Arabian Nights' and 
'Ragged Dick,' and quite original." — New 
York Recorder. 

Americans in Europe. By One of 

Them. 241 pages, i2mo, cloth, $1.00; 
paper, 50 cents. 

A book of unreserved observation of Eu- 
ropean life, as viewed by an American of 

acknowledged position and discernment. 

AthlAtlcB for Physical Onltnre. 

Theo. C. Knauff. 114 superb illustra- 
tions. i2mo, 442 pages, bound in cloth, 
$2.00. 

Next to the Sandow work published b^ 
us, to which it is a companion volume, this 
is the handsomest book on athletics in the 
market. A book which a father might bor- 
row from his boys. A library, too, in itself. 
Study it and lengthen your days. 

The Bedouin «lrl. Mrs. S. J. Hig- 
GINSON, author of " A Princess of Java." 
Illustrated by J. Steeple Davis. i2mo, 
cloth, 347 pages, $1.25 ; paper, 50 cents. 
JeannetteL. Gilder says in 7'A^CAzVtfj§-(7 
Tribune : " The description of the pilgrim- 
age from Bagdad seems to me capital and 
realistic and very lifelike. * The Bedouin 
Girl ' is a beautiful little thing and clever, 
and is quite a new character in the stories 
of these ^w de sikcle days." 

Before the Orlnsro Came. Eleven 
stories of Old California. Gertrude 
Atherton, author of "The Dooms- 
woman," etc. lamo, cloth, 306 pages, 
$1.00. 

These thrilling stories illustrate with 
wonderful fidelity to nature the passion and 
pathos, as well as the abounding incident 
and color of California life in the old days 
before the American or Gringo took posses- 
sion. 

Cavalry Life In Tent nnd Field. 

Mrs. Orsemus B. Boyd. With portrait. 

i2mo, cloth, 376 pages, $z.oo; paper, 50 

cents. 

" A wonderful record of frontier life as 
seen through the eyes of a cavalry officer's 
wife." — Current Literature. 

Dearest. Mrs. Forrester. z2mo, cloth, 

$1.25. 

A charming tale of English life and ro- 
mance, one somewhat after the style of 
** Jane Eyre." It is a love-story, pure and 
simple, 

'* How to succeed without beauty would 
be a good title for this book."— T'awfj- 
Democrat. New Orleans. 



memoirs of Anne O. Ij* Botta* 

Written by Her Friends. With selec- 
tions from her correspondence and from 
her writings in prose and poetry. Edited 
by Professor Vincenzo Botta. A limited 
edition printed on Holland paper, with 
gilt top and untrimmed edges. Portrait 
of Mrs. Botta. j Cloth, 8vo, 475 pages, 
$3'So- 

Memoirs of the only lady who ever suc- 
ceeded in establishing a Literary Salon in 
New York and at one of whose receptions 
Poe gave his first reading of *' The Raven." 
*' An extraordinary tribute and one that 
could not have been called forth by any 
ordinary character. Mr. James Anthony 
Froude, Mr. Parke Godwin, Mrs. Julia 
Ward Howe, Mr. E, C. Stedman, Mr. 
Charles Dudley Warner, Miss Kate Field, 
Miss Kate Sanborn, Mr. John Bigelow, 
Miss Edith M. Thomas, Mr. Richard Wat- 
son Gilder, Mrs. Mary Mapes Dodge, Mr. 
Moncure D. Conway, Mr. Justin McCarthy, 
and many others have contributed these 
memoirs." — Neiv York Sun. 



Costnopolls. Paul Bourget. Illus- 
trated by A. Casarin. Large i2mo, cloth, 
343 pages, $1.50; paper, not illustrated, 
so cents. 

This distinguished author's most cele- 
brated work. In no other work has M. 
Bourget displayed in such conspicuous a 
degree his remarkable powers of pen por- 
traiture and " Soul Surgery." 

As a whole, Cosmopolis is the story of 
the victory of Christianity over the religion 
of intellectualism. 

Diary of a Nobody. George Gros- 

SMiTH. Illustrated by Weeden Grossmith. 

i2mo, cloth, 235 pages, $1.00. 

The "Nobody" is a London city clerk, 
who records in his diary the every-day 
doings of his uneventful life. 

" It has amused us from cover to cover." 
— Saturday Review^ London. 

The Donmstvomsin. Gertrude 

Atherton, author of '* Before the Gringo 

Came." izmo, cloth, $i.cx3. 

A story of Spanish hatred and family 
feuds ; of a Spanish woman who by the 
strength of her love bore down all racial 
prejudices and shadowed all family prece- 
dents by voluntarily uniting herself to the 
male representative of the opposing house. 

"A breathing reality created by a master- 
hand." — Vanity Fair ^ London. 

Elveryhody^s Fairy fSodmother. 

DoROTHv Q. lamo, cloth, illuminated 
cover, 50 cents. 

Love is "Everybody's Fairy Godmother.'* 
An ideal story for a child. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



SOM£ PUBLICATIONS OF CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING CO.— Continued. 



Ftfty Tlionsaiid Dollam Ran- 
som* David Malcolm, author of "A 
Fiend Incarnate." i6mo, cloth, 75 cents. 
The story relates the unparalleled ad- 
ventures of John Granger, a New York 
merchant, who, after having thrilling ex- 
periences enough in his native city to last 
him a lifetime, is inveigled into the wilds of 
the west. The reader will leave it as he 
would a foot race— breathless. 

Gossip of the Caribbees. W. H. R. 

Trowbridge, Jr. x2mo, cloth, 274 pages, 

$1.25 ; paper, 50 cents. 

"These sketches of Anglo-West-Indian 
life have the unmistakable flavor of Mr. Kip- 
ling about them. They are interesting bits 
of colony life, told in graphic, forceful style, 
with occasional touches of rather daring 
realism." — Literary World, 

The Green Bay Tree. Herbert 
Vivian and W. H. Wilkins. i2mo, cloth, 
389 pages, $1.00. 

This book endeavors to prove that the 
wicked flourish like the green bay tree in 
this life. It is undoubtedly the most tren- 
chant and brilliant as well as the most 
cynical work of fiction lately published. 

Inebriety or Narcomania : Its 
Etlologry, Pathology, Treat- 
ment and Jarlsprndeiice. Dr. 

Norman Kerr. 3d edition. Cloth, 640 

pages, with marginal captions and copious 

index, $3.50 ; law calf, $5.00. 

"This volume is enormously valuable." 
— New York Herald. 

" The author's views have met with con- 
stantly increasing acceptance on the part 
of managers of reformatory institutions as 
well as of the practitioners of medicine." — 
Ne-w York Sun. 

Klpllne's Poems. Containing Bar- 
rack-Room Ballads, Departmental Dit- 
ties, and other verses. z2mo, cloth, 270 
pages, $1.00. 
" She was so good she made him worse." 

— Kipling. 

lieaves of the I«otos. David Banks 
SiCKELs. Frontispiece portrait of the au- 
thor, izmo, cloth, gilt top, 75 cents. 
Many of these poems were written during 
the author's residence in Siam, as diplo- 
matic representative of the United States, 
and the influence of the lotos-eating Orient 
is as perceptible in them as it is in the 
poems of Sir Edwin Arnold. 

Mrs. CllfT-Crosby's Niece. Ella 
Childs Hurlbut. i2mo, cloth, $1.00; 
paper, 25 cents. 

This is an exceedingly piquant society 
novel. A tale of New York fashionable 
life. It abounds in striking passages, and 
its easy unbroken style and evidences of 
keen perception make its reflection of fash- 
.onable New York life singularly faithful 
'nd clear. Digitized by 



The major's Favorite. John 

Strange winter, author of " Booties' 

Baby," "The Soul of the Bishop," "A 

Seventh Child, "^ etc. i6mo, cloth, 75 

cents. 

The story shows the struggles of a young 
mind reared with all care and love ; strug- 
gles between home and affection, right and 
wrong. 

"Far above the average novel." — Even- 
ing- Post. 

"The book is delightful," — Con^^eg-a- 
tionalist. 

A pendant to "Booties' Baby," which 
Ruskin declared to be the best novel he had 
ever read. 

my Friend Pasquale. J. Selwin 

Tait. i2mo, cloth, $1.00. 

Stories of double consciousness, supersti- 
tion, romance, hypnotism, infirmity, and 
love. 

" The author has undoubtedly the power 
of depicting strange situations in clear col- 
ors."— 7oro«#i> Week. 

"As a study in abnormal psychology, it 
is ably written." — Review oj" Reviews. 

Napoleon: A llrama. Henry A. 

Adams, M.A. Limited edition. lamo, 

cloth, gilt top, $1.50. 

The play begins at Malmaison in 1804, 
and ends with Napoleon's abdication in 
1814. 

A masterly and lifehke presentation, his- 
torically correct. 

Napoleon Ill.'and I^ady Ktnart. 

An Episode of the Tuileries. Translated 

from the French of Pierre de Lano. 

With portrait. i2mo, cloth, $1.00. 

This book furnishes a plain, unvarnished, 
and tragic account of the profligacy which 
existed at the French Court under the Sec- 
ond Empire, and the undermining influences 
of which undoubtedly led to the Emperor's 
downfall. 

On India's Frontier; or, Nepal, 
the On rkha!*»' Mysterious I^and . 

Henry Ballantine, M.A., Late Ameri- 
can Consul to Bombay ; author of " Mid- 
night Marches Through Persia." Mag- 
nificently and profusely illustrated. i2mo, 
cloth, $2.50. 

"Outside of a small number of English- 
men, the foreigners who have visited Nepal 
can be counted on one's fingers, and even 
these have been under espionage. Mr. Bal- 
lantine, however, was one of the favored 
few, and he tells his story in a way that will 
certainly carry temptation into the bosoms 
of other would-be travellers. "— The Critic. 



A Savage of Civilization. By. 

x2mo, cloth, $z.oo. 



How not to right a great wrong. 

This is tte story of John Roberts, a young 
man of strong character, whose life is 
poisoned by the discovery that he is illc. 



SOME PUBLICATIONS OF CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING CO.—Continued. 



Xlie Strn ng-er Woman. John 
Strange Winter, author of *' Booties' 
Baby," "The Major^s Favorite," etc. 
Cloth, $z.oo. 

" ' The Stranger Woman * is not the ' New 
Woman ' but an original creation ; a lovable 
attractive g-irl, with a terrible future hang- 
ing' over her. It is a thrilling story and yet 
an amusing novel." — Amusetnent Gazette. 

The Romance of Judge Ketcli- 
iim* Horace Annesley Vachell. 
xsmo, cloth, $i.oo. 

*' The difference between life in an Eng- 
lish country house and that in a Western 
home is very charmingly described. The 
book will be enjoyed by the great multitude 
of readers of Action."— Boston Transcript. 

Sandow's System of Physical 

Training. Splendidly illustrated. 

Small quarto, cloth, $2.50. 

Its illustrations are worth many times it^ 
cost. 

"This book is a unique, a striking, a 
magnificent production, from every point 
of view." — Public Opinion. 

A Seventb Child. John Strange 
Winter, author of " Booties* Baby," 
"Soul of the Bishop," "Major's Favor- 
ite," etc. lamo, cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 
cents. 

This novel is based upon the old supersti- 
tion of the gift of second sight. 

"This new novel is a masterpiece, and 
w^ill add to the author's reputation. * * — 
Washington Post. 

The Soul of the Rlshop, John 
Strange Winter, author of " Booties' 
Baby," "Major's Favorite," "Seventh 
Child," etc. With portrait. z2mo, cloth, 

$1.25. 

The author explains her object in the fol- 
lowing words : " I have tried to show how 
a really honest mind may, and alas, too 
often does, suffer mental and moral ship- 
w^reck over those rocks which the Church 
allows to endanger the channel to a harbor 
never easy to navigate at any time." 

TavIwiocU Tales. Gilbert Parker, 
and others. Profusely illustrated, izmo, 
cloth, $1.25. 

The initial and by far the longest story of 
this volume is " The March 01 the White 
Guard," by Gilbert Parker. The story 
opens at one of the Hudson Bay Company*s 
posts, and depicts the trials and torments 
of a march 01 rescue through the land of 
eternal snow. 

Tliumb-NatI Sketches of Ans- 
trnllan l<lfe> C. Haddon Chambers, 
author of " Captain Swift." i2mo, clotili, 
268 pages, $1.25. 

These stories of Australian life give an 
excellent idea of life in that English colony. 
They are crisp, bright, vigorous, and ex- 
ceedingly engrossing. 



Told by the Colonel. W. L. Aldbn. 
Illustrated. z2mo, cloth, $1.25 ; paper, 50 
cents. 

From first to last the humor is convulsing, 
yet it is never overstrained. Mark Twdm 
himself never did anything better than 
these stories. 

Under the Corslcan. Emily How- 
land HoppiN. izmo, cloth, 330 pages, 
$1.00. 

A tale of conspiracy, infatuation, and 
love, with a vivid description of life in 
Paris under the First Napoleon. 

" Told with a skill and power that makes 
of the whole history of the time a vivid 
reality." — Boston Courier. 

The Untempered ^Vind. Joanna 
E. Wood. Illustrated, zzmo, cloth, 
$1.00 ; paper, 50 cents. 

The story might be called the " Scarlet 
Letter Up to Date." 

"The first work of a new author which 
within the first month of its publication has 
established her reputation as a ^eat writer. 
' The strongest and best American novel of 
the year.' ^^—Current Literature. 

What One TV o na a n Thinks. 

Harvot Holt Cahoon. Edited by Cyn- 
thia Westover. i2mo, cloth, 369 pages, 
$1.00 ; paper, 50 cents. 
These seventy essays are by an extremely 
talented and sympathetic author, who writes 
from the heart to the heart in a sweet and 
simple fashion peculiarly her own. 

"Much wisdom in a little room. 'The 
most delightful reading imaginable.'" — 
New Orleans Picayune. 

ATho i» the Iflan ? A tale of the Scot- 
tish Border. J. Selwin Tait, author of 
"My Friend Pasquale." Illustrated by 
A. C. Reinhart. i2mo, cloth, 204 pages, 
$1.25. 

" Mr. Tait has given the reading world a 
novel whose dramatic power, clear, pure 
style, and unbroken interest entitle him to 
a leading place in the ranks of fiction wri- 
ters of the day."— Pk^/zc Opinion. 

" Equal in every respect to the ' Leaven- 
worth Casc.^ "—Boston Times. 

Zlta. S. Baring-Gould, author of "Me- 
balah," "Judith," etc. Illustrated. i2mo, 
cloth, 40a pages, $1.25. 
One of this eminent author's best novels, 
and perhaps his very best. Certainly no 
other work of his shows in such a promi- 
nent degree his wonderful and interesting 
knowledge of out-of-the-way English coun- 
try life. 

Tobacco In Sons and Sti^ry. Com- 
piled by John Bain, Jr. Fourth edition. 
i8mo, fibre chamois, 140 pages, 73 cents. 
" There is something in the book that ap- 
peals pleasantly to every one who indulges 
m pipe, cigar, or clgaretU."—PAiladelpAia 
Press. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



SOME PUBLIC A TIONS OF CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING CO.—Contin-ued 



Tbe Good Things of Bartli. Al- 

FHONSE Daudet, Julian Ralph, Frank 

R. Stockton, and others, xsmo, cloth, 

136 pages, 75 cents. 

A collection of original sketches, written 
by ten well-known writers, on different 
comforts enjoyed by men. 

An Oaten Pipe. Rev. James B. Ken- 
yon, D.D. i2mo, cloth, deckled edges, 
gilt top, 133 pages, $1.00. 
" A veiy cnoice collection of fine verse. 
The whole volume breathes a cheerful, 
wholesome, and uplifting spirit, and reflects 
additional honor upon Dr. Kenyon's liter- 
ary -woT^."— Daily Post, Syracuse. 

Tbe Ralnbo-nr of Gold. Joseph A. 

Altsheler, author of "The Hidden 

Mine," etc. 8vo, cloth, $1.00. 

A vivid and thrilling description of ad- 
ventures encountered on the Great Plains 
of America by a party of gold hunters in 
the days of '49. 

The Hidden Mine. Joseph A. Alt- 
sheler, author of "The Rainbow of 
Gold," etc. 8vo, cloth, $1.00. 
In this book is told how the adventurers 
of "The Rainbow of Gold" found their 
treasure, and their straggles with freeboot- 
ers to keep it. It is a fascinating story of 
experiences on the frontier some fifty years 
ago. 

Scottlsb Follt'ljore. Rev. Duncan 
ASDERSON. 8vo, cloth, 248 pages, $i.oo. 
"It is not a story-book, nor yet is it a 
book of essays, but something between the 
two, commingling the best elements of both 
in such a way that you cannot help being 
charmed."— iVew York Herald. 

teo XIII. and Modern Civilisa- 
tion. J. Bleeker Miller. Bvo, cloth, 
189 pages, Si. 50. 

An exposition of the policy of the Roman 
Catholic Church towards the State, the fam- 
ily, and the individual, tracing its source 
from pagan times to the present day. 

Tbe Sqnare Circle ; or. Stories of the 
Prize Ring. J. B. McCormick, "Ma- 
con." Illustrated. 8vo, cloth, 274 pages, 
$1.00. 

The author says in the Preface: "Ever 
since I contributed the chapter on 'The 
Sporting Editor ' to the series of articles 
■ on 'Journalism,' published in 1892 in Lip' 
pincott's Magazine, I have frequently been 
aslced, personally and by letter, by many 
of my readers to write a book of sporting 
sketches, mainly to be recollections of the 
many interesting scenes and events I have 
witnessed during my sporting career. 
This book complies with these requests. 



The Bravest of Them All. J. Sel- 

wiN Tait. Illustrated. 8vo, cloth, gold 

tup, 67 pages, $1.00. 

A worthy supplement to ^Esop's Fables, 
bringing into action and endowing with 
speech many of the familiar wild animals 
in a manner to interest both old and young, 
and pointing a moral that may well be fol- 
lowed l3y both, for the advancement of the 
good that is in us all. 

Tbe Story of Evauicellna Clsne- 
ros: Told by Herself: Introduction, 
Julian Hawthorne : Her rescue from 
prison in Cuba, Karl Decker: lUustra- 
'ons, Frederic Remington and others, 
tfvo, cloth, 260 pages,$l. 25, with. atlas. 
" It is indeed rare that one finds the age 
of chivalry revived in these prosaic days, 
or that a story so ideally perfect as this in 
setting, background, in intrigue, daring 
and cumulative interest is enacted outside 
the books of Hope and Weyman." — Phila- 
delphia Ledger, 

A Pretty Bandit. Frank Bailey 
Millard. 8vo, cloth, 264 pages, $1.00. 
A collection of vigorously written tales 
of the far west, in desert, mountain, plain, 
and town, by one who has evidently been 
there with his eyes and ears wide open. 

Gonpel of the Stars. James Hihgs- 
TON, "Gabriel." Introduction, George 
H. Hepworth. Bvo, cloth, 194 pages, 
$1.00. 

A picture of astrology as it wafe in the 
past, dwelling on the glories of its career, 
and showing why it is as worthy of esteem 
in our days as it was in the days of Ptolemy. 
No other book on the subject has been writ- 
ten from this standpoint. 

Sex 'Worship^ an Exposition of the 
Phallic Origin of Religion. Clifford 
Howard. Second edition. 8vo, cloth, 
215 pages, $1.50. 

The principal and more salient features 
of phallicism in its direct and obvious rela- 
tion to theology, and to the religious be- 
liefs and symbols of the present day. It 
embodies a large amount of original re- 
search, as well as the investigations of the 
leading authorities on the subject. 

A Jesnlt of To-Dsy. Orange Mc- 
Neill. i2mo, cloth, 146 pages, 75 cents. 

Two of a Tradf". Martha McCul- 
LOUGH Williams. 8vo, cloth, 206 pages, 
75 cents. 

The Komance of Gnardanjonte 

Arline E. Davis. 8vo, cloth, gold top, 
deckled edges, 138 pages, $1.00. 



These are all books of unusual merit and interest. Tliey represent 
variety in subject and treatment, and are all characterized by tUexr su- 
JTrdtlin tie vari.yus branches of literature to u,HicH tHey severally 
belong. 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



Digitized by l[^icrosoft® 



Digitized by Microsoft® 



liuam 



lii ^^ 



r I. II*